Search
Search Funnelback University
- Refined by:
- Date: Past 3 months
1 -
10 of
352
search results for Economics
Fully-matching results
-
WPThe pay of unskilledApril16
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESHnumber24June2016.pdf20 Jul 2021: 1500–1800," European Review of Economic History 3, no. 02 (1999), Jan L. ... An Empirical Exercise for England, C. 1300-1830 " Economic History Review 64, no. -
WP-7 February 2014 - Ristuccia Solomou
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESHnumber18March2014.pdf20 Jul 2021: of conceptualising the relationship between technological advances and long-term historical. economic growth. ... economic growth. Working with fairly simple prototype models of GPTs a number of. -
Working Paper No. 29 – MARCH 2017: BY-EMPLOYMENTS IN ...
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESH_number_29_March_2017.pdf20 Jul 2021: argued that European peasants depended on manufacturing income for sheer economic survival and. ... represent the economic activities of contemporary men. John Swain has contended that ‘the. -
Working Paper No. 28 – MARCH 2017: CORRECTING THE ...
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESH_number_28_March_2017.pdf20 Jul 2021: University Press, 1997); Wrigley, The early English censuses (Oxford: British Academy Records of Economic. ... Journal of Economic History, 48:1 (1988), p. 125. 49 Smith, ‘Underregistration’, p. -
Working Paper No. 27 – MARCH 2017: ALLOCATING LABOURERS ...
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESH_number_27_March_2017.pdf20 Jul 2021: eds), The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Britain. Volume 1. Industrialisation, 1700-1870. ... Floud, Jane Humphries and Paul Johnson (eds), The Cambridge Economic History of Modern. -
Working Paper No. 26 – MARCH 2017: USING PROBATE ...
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESH_number_26_March_2017.pdf20 Jul 2021: relationships back in the consideration of long-run economic development and the industrial. ... eds), The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Britain. Volume 1. Industrialisation, 1700-1870. -
Working Paper No. 22 – 2015: WHAT CAUSED CHICAGO ...
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESH22(Postel-Vinay,April2015).pdf20 Jul 2021: 5. sense that the direct contribution of real estate to the decline in economic activity was small. ... aggregate and regional economic indicators) to determine chances and length of survival for each bank. -
Working Coal paper submission
https://www.econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk/docs/CWPESHnumber33Sept2018.pdf20 Jul 2021: held a competitive advantage in agriculture which provided a greater economic return than could. ... 373. 86. Coleman, ‘Proto-industrialization’, p. 443. 87. Broadberry, British economic growth, p. -
Women economists underrepresented ‘at every level’ in UK academia –…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/women-economists-underrepresented-at-every-level-in-uk-academia-report13 Jul 2021: The economy affects everyone, and economists need to represent us all,” said Bateman, an Economics Fellow at Gonville and Caius College. ... Bateman says she hopes the new report will serve as a “call to arms” for the discipline of economics. -
Who Left the Dogs Out?3D Animal Reconstruction with Expectation ...
mi.eng.cam.ac.uk/~cipolla/publications/inproceedings/2020-ECCV-3D-dog-reconstruction.pdf28 Jun 2021: 1 Introduction. Animals contribute greatly to our society, in numerous ways both economic andotherwise (there are more than 63 million pet dogs in the US alone [3]).
Search history
Recently clicked results
Recently clicked results
Your click history is empty.
Recent searches
Recent searches
Your search history is empty.