In an interesting and thought-provoking paper recently published by the Economic History of Developing Regions, Johan Fourie and Leigh Gardner ask why relatively few papers from developing countries have been published in top-ranked economic history journals. They provide a number of tentative answers of which differences in academic traditions between regions seem to be an important one. In this paper, we contribute to this discussion by putting the identified puzzle in the broader context of the development of economic history in the Western world and African universities. We fear that the silence from African scholars in top-ranked economic history journals might lead economic historians in the Western world to believe that little econom...
How many economic historians are there in the world? In which countries or world regions are they co...
This paper offers (yet another) reflection on the history and current status of economic history. No...
This paper outlines the debate surrounding the emergence of the first ‘global’ economy and discusses...
The internationalization of economic history is everywhere except in the publication outputs. Using ...
This paper examines the state and scope of the study of economic history of developing regions, unde...
The field of African economic history is in resurgence. This paper reviews recent and on-going resea...
What is new in African economic history? A. G. Hopkins recently presented the “new economic history ...
This article argues for constructive responses to the dominance, in the analysis of African economic...
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson have dramatically challenged the tendency of economists to confine th...
In a recent paper for the Journal of African History, A.G. Hopkins writes that economists have spent...
In a recent paper for the Journal of African History, A.G. Hopkins writes that economists have spent...
This thesis examines the infrastructure behind the academic discipline of African History. By lookin...
Abstract In spite of a rapid globalization of our discipline, surprisingly little is known about eco...
What are the problems addressed by the growing field of global economic history? What debates and me...
The essay debates the delay on the part of Economic History towards African and colonial studies. Th...
How many economic historians are there in the world? In which countries or world regions are they co...
This paper offers (yet another) reflection on the history and current status of economic history. No...
This paper outlines the debate surrounding the emergence of the first ‘global’ economy and discusses...
The internationalization of economic history is everywhere except in the publication outputs. Using ...
This paper examines the state and scope of the study of economic history of developing regions, unde...
The field of African economic history is in resurgence. This paper reviews recent and on-going resea...
What is new in African economic history? A. G. Hopkins recently presented the “new economic history ...
This article argues for constructive responses to the dominance, in the analysis of African economic...
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson have dramatically challenged the tendency of economists to confine th...
In a recent paper for the Journal of African History, A.G. Hopkins writes that economists have spent...
In a recent paper for the Journal of African History, A.G. Hopkins writes that economists have spent...
This thesis examines the infrastructure behind the academic discipline of African History. By lookin...
Abstract In spite of a rapid globalization of our discipline, surprisingly little is known about eco...
What are the problems addressed by the growing field of global economic history? What debates and me...
The essay debates the delay on the part of Economic History towards African and colonial studies. Th...
How many economic historians are there in the world? In which countries or world regions are they co...
This paper offers (yet another) reflection on the history and current status of economic history. No...
This paper outlines the debate surrounding the emergence of the first ‘global’ economy and discusses...