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E-grāmata: Crises in Economic and Social History: A Comparative Perspective

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Exploring how crises have shaped economic and social life from the thirteenth century to the twenty-first.

This collection of essays brings together historians examining social and economic crises from the thirteenth century to the twenty-first. Crisis is an almost ubiquitous concept for historians, applicable across (amongst others) the histories of agriculture, disease, finance and trade. Yet there has been little attempt to compare its use as an explanatory tool between these discrete fields of research. This volume breaks down the boundaries between traditional historical time periods and sub-disciplines of history to examine the ways in which past societies have coped with crises, and the role of crisis in generating economic and social change. Should we conceptualise a medieval agrarian or financial crisis differently from their modern counterparts? Were there similarities in how contemporaries responded to famine or outbreaks of disease? How comparable are crises within households, within institutions, or across national and international networks of trade? Contributors examine how crises have shaped economic and social life in a range of studies from the Great Depression in 1930s Latin America to the outbreak of plague in seventeenth-century central Europe, and from sheep and cattle murrain in fourteenth-century England to the Northern Rock building society collapse of 2007.

A.T. BROWN is an Addison Wheeler Research Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies at Durham University.

ANDY BURN is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies at Durham University.

ROB DOHERTY is a doctoral candidate in history at DurhamUniversity.

CONTRIBUTORS: Peter H. Bent, A.T. Brown, Andy Burn, Catherine Casson, Mark Casson, Samuel K. Cohn, Jr., Rob Doherty, Josette Duncan, Matthew Hollow, Pavla Jirkovį, Alan Knight, John S. Lee, Cinzia Lorandini,John Martin, Ranald Michie, Anne L. Murphy, Pamela Nightingale, John Singleton, Philip Slavin, Paul Warde

Recenzijas

All scholars of environmental, public health and financial crises, modern or historical, should take a look at this book, not least for the fine introductory chapter that draws upon a wide and diverse range of reading from economics, history, sociology and philosophy to ask significant questions about current approaches to the study of crises. * CONTINUITY & CHANGE *

List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
ix
List of Contributors
xi
Preface xvi
Introduction: Coping with Crisis -- Understanding the Role of Crises in Economic and Social History 1(26)
A.T. Brown
Andy Burn
Rob Doherty
PART I CONCEPT AND METHODOLOGY
1 `Crisis' and the Great Depression in Latin America
27(26)
Alan Knight
2 Using the Disaster Cycle in Economic and Social History
53(26)
John Singleton
3 Economic Crises in England, 1270--1520: A Statistical Approach
79(32)
Mark Casson
Catherine Casson
PART II AGRICULTURE AND ENVIRONMENT
4 Flogging a Dead Cow: Coping with Animal Panzootic on the Eve of the Black Death
111(26)
Philip Slavin
5 Early Modern `Resource Crisis': The Wood Shortage Debates in Europe
137(24)
Paul Warde
6 The International Crisis of 1972--77: The Neglected Agrarian Dimension
161(28)
John Martin
PART III DEATH AND DISEASE
7 Coping with Epidemic Crises, from Antiquity to the Present
189(24)
Samuel K. Cohn, Jr.
8 Plague Year 1680 in Central Europe: Using Czech Plague Registers to Monitor Epidemic Progression
213(22)
Pavla Jirkova
9 `Two Words... Good Sanitation': Colonial Medical Responses to the Cholera Epidemics of 1865 and 1888 in Malta
235(26)
Josette Duncan
PART IV FINANCE AND BANKING
10 The Impact of Crises on Credit in the Late Medieval English Economy
261(22)
Pamela Nightingale
11 Dealing with the Threat of Reform: The Bank of England in the 1780s
283(20)
Anne L. Murphy
12 Bursting the Bubble: The 2007 Northern Rock Crisis in Historical Perspective
303(22)
Matthew Hollow
Ranald Michie
PART V TRADE AND INDUSTRY
13 Crises in the Late Medieval English Cloth Trade
325(26)
John S. Lee
14 The Roots of Decline: The Tyrolean Silk Industry and the Crises of the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
351(22)
Cinzia Lorandini
15 The Stabilising Effects of the Dingley Tariff and the Recovery from the 1890s Depression in the USA
373(18)
Peter H. Bent
Index 391