English constitutional history
In: Oxford paperbacks university series 16
23813 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Oxford paperbacks university series 16
In: The economic history review, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 637-675
ISSN: 1468-0289
D. M. Owen (Ed.). The Making of King's Lynn: A Documentary Survey.Roger J. P. Kain and Hugh C. Prince. The Tithe Surveys of England and Wales.Alexander Grant. Independence and Nationhood: Scotland, 1306–1469.Ralph A. Houlbrooke. The English Family, 1450–1700.Kenneth R. Andrews, Trade, Plunder, and Settlement.J. A. Sharpe. Crime in Early Modern England, 1550–1750.C. A. F. Meekings, S. Porter, and I. Roy (Eds.). The Hearth Tax Collectors'Book for Worcester, 1678–1680.Robert Newton. Eighteenth‐Century Exeter.Aubrey Newman (Ed.). Politics and Finance in the Eighteenth Century: Dame Lucy Sutherland.Susan A. Knox. The Making of the Shetland Landscape.Ivan Waddington. The Medical Profession and the Industrial Revolution.Francois Crouzet. The First Industrialists: The Problem of Origins.N. L. Tranter. Population and Society, 1750–1940: Contrasts in Population Growth.T. M. Devine (Ed.). Farm Servants and Labour in Lowland Scotland, 1770–1914.Alan Fox. History and Heritage: The Social Origins of the British Industrial Relations System.Noel W. Thompson. The People's Science: The Popular Political Economy of Exploitation and Crisis, 1816–34.Carolyn Steedman. Policing the Victorian Community.Jane Lewis. Women in England, 1870–1950: Sexual Divisions and Social Change.Youssef Cassis. Les Banquiers de la City à I′époque Edouardienne.Kenneth D. Brown (Ed.). The First Labour Party, 1906–1914.M. J. Daunton (Ed.). Councillors and Tenants: Local Authority Housing in English Cities, 1919–1939.Elizabeth DurbinNew Jerusalem: The Labour Party and the Economics of Democratic Socialism.GENERAL Liam Kennedy and Philip Ollerenshaw (Eds.). An Economic History of Ulster, 1820–1939. (Manchester: Manchester University Press. 1985. Pp. 248. £25.)Harry A. Miskimin. Money and Power in Fifteenth‐Century France.David R. Ringrose. Madrid and the Spanish Economy, 1560–1850.Ole Hyldtoft. Københavns Industrialisering, 1840–1914.Jan de Vries. European Urbanization, 1500–1800.Barbara M. Tucker. Samuel Slater and the Origins of the American Textile Industry, 1790–1860.B. W. Higman. Slave Populations of the British Caribbean, 1807–1834.Christopher Abel and Colin M. Lewis (Eds.). Latin America, Economic Imperialism, and the State: The Political Economy of the External Connection from Independence to the Present.Eliyahu Ashtor. Levant Trade in the Later Middle Ages.William T. Rowe. Hankow: Commerce and Society in a Chinese City, 1796–1889.Tim Wright.Coal Mining in China's Economy and Society, 1895–1937.Penelope Francks.Technology and Agricultural Development in Pre‐War Japan.N. G. Owen.Prosperity without Progress: Manila Hemp and Material Life in the Colonial Philippines.J. Forbes Munro.Britain in Tropical Africa, 1880‐1960: Economic Relationships and Impact.Philip McMichael.Settlers and the Agrarian Question: Capitalism in Colonial Australia.Katrina Alford.Production or Reproduction?: An Economic History of Women in Australia, 1788‐1850.C. C. Eldridge (Ed.). British Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century.William N. Parker.Europe, America, and the Wider World: Essays on the Economic History of Western Capitalism, Vol. 1, Europe and the World Economy.Studies in Economic and Social History
In: The Cambridge Constitutional History of the United Kingdom (Cambridge UP, Forthcoming)
SSRN
Working paper
In: Canadian government series 3
In: Journal of modern European history: Zeitschrift für moderne europäische Geschichte = Revue d'histoire européenne contemporaine, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 221-242
ISSN: 2631-9764
«Constitutional Fever»? Constitutional Integration in Post-Revolutionary France, Great Britain and Germany, 1814–c.1835 This article proposes a comparative perspective on the role of constitutions in European political cultures from 1814 to c.1835. Through its analysis of constitutions first as a means to legitimising post-revolutionary monarchies, and secondly as a means to integrating the divided societies in France, Great Britain as well as the German states, this article suggests two major results: 1) Constitutions were a central instrument that was imagined by post-revolutionary European societies in order to open up an «evolutionary» path to political progress and thereby finally «end» or «prevent» further revolutionary changes. 2) The major challenges to constitutional integration were posed by the emergence of competing political groups that often demanded a strengthening of certain parts of the constitutions or their further reform. The problems, which were faced by almost all political actors regarding the acceptance of these new imperatives of party politics and the different constitutional «solutions» that they had developed to meet these challenges, provide explanations for the different constitutional paths that were taken by Great Britain, the German states and France during the early 1830s. In Great Britain, a common constitutionalist language enabled a precarious understanding amongst the competing groups, whereas anti-pluralist constitutional conceptions led to constitutional instability in France and even damaged the very idea of constitutional integration in Germany thus benefitting a «unification first»-approach in the German states.
In: American historical series
In: The economic history review, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 622-654
ISSN: 1468-0289
The Victoria History of the Counties of England: A History of the County of StaffordD. M. Palliser. Tudor York. (Oxford: Oxford University PressT. S. Willan. Elizabethan ManchesterRosemary O'Day. The English Clergy: the Emergence and Consolidation of a Profession, IKG:Peter Mathias. The Transformation of England. Essays in the Economic and Social History of England in the Eighteenth Century.Ian H. Adams (Ed.)Janet Roebuck. Urban Development in Nineteenth‐Century London: Lambeth, Battersea, and Wandsworth, 1838–88.Frank Whitson FetterBarry GordonTony MasonI. C. R. ByattJ. Mellino (Ed.). Housing, Social Policy, and the State. (London: Croom Helm.John Scott and Michael HughesC. D. Harbury and D. M. W. N. HitchensD. C. ColemanY. S. BrennerAndre Gunder FrankE. Rosenbaum and A. J. ShermanHans Peter BleuelFernand Braudel and Ernest Labrousse (Eds.). Histoire Economique et Sociale de la France.David MontgomeryBjorn HettneJan S. HogendornMaths IsacsonHakan LindgrenLars HassbringUlla WikanderHans Modig
In: Itinerario: international journal on the history of European expansion and global interaction, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 24-25
ISSN: 2041-2827