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21 - 26 of 26 search results for economics at caius |d=2019 |u:www.arch.cam.ac.uk where 8 match all words and 18 match some words.
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  2. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research Annual Report…

    https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/files/miar-report-2004.pdf
    22 Aug 2019: The household, as a nexus of social and economic activities, plays a central role in how society. ... relationships and the integration of the household into the wider social landscape (site, settlements, andactivity zones) and the physical landscape
  3. Archaeology at Cambridge 2015–2016 McDonald Institute for…

    https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/files/ar_2015-16_for_web.pdf
    22 Aug 2019: Prof. Martin Millett FBA (Faculty of Classics) The social and economic archaeology of the Roman world. • ... Nicholas Postgate FBA (Retired) Assyriology; social and economic history of Mesopotamia. •
  4. Annual Report 2004 use3

    https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/files/miar-report-2005.pdf
    22 Aug 2019: tive, cultural and economic aspects of human. advancement. Knowledge of butchery and imple-. ... plexity;. • networks of socio-economic interaction: social relations as a mechanism to explore complexity.
  5. Annual Report 2002 use

    https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/files/miar-report-2002.pdf
    22 Aug 2019: The papers in this latter volume explore and develop ways of using food to write social history; theymove beyond taphonomic and economic properties of ‘subsistence resources’ to examine the social backgroundand
  6. Annual Report 2004 use3

    https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/files/miar-report-2005.pdf
    22 Aug 2019: tive, cultural and economic aspects of human. advancement. Knowledge of butchery and imple-. ... plexity;. • networks of socio-economic interaction: social relations as a mechanism to explore complexity.
  7. Annual Report 2002 use

    https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/files/miar-report-2002.pdf
    22 Aug 2019: The papers in this latter volume explore and develop ways of using food to write social history; theymove beyond taphonomic and economic properties of ‘subsistence resources’ to examine the social backgroundand

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