JEL classification

Journal of Economic Literature Classification (10696) N - Economic History (877) N2 - Financial Markets and Institutions (131) N25 - Asia including Middle East (13)
Number of items at this level: 13.
Accounting
  • Yuan, Weipeng, Macve, Richard (2024). Reframing imperial China's indigenous accounting history: further discoveries in archival materials from the three centuries before 1850. Accounting and Business Research, 54(4), 457 - 490. https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.2023.2294735 picture_as_pdf
  • Economic History
  • Arslantas, Yasin (2018). Drivers and constraints of state confiscation of elite property in the Ottoman Empire, 1750-1839. (Economic History working papers 280/2018). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ishizu, Mina (2021). Metropolitan financial agents and the emergence of inter-regional financial linkages in England and Japan, 1760-1860. (Economic History Working Papers 327). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Ishizu, Mina (2020). 'Money markets and trade’ defining provincial financial agents in England and Japan. (Economic History Working Papers WP 305). London School of Economics and Political Science, Economic History Department. picture_as_pdf
  • Knight, Richard (2014). The political economy of Byzantium: transaction costs and the decentralisation of the Byzantine Empire in the twelfth century. (The Economic History working paper series 187). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ma, Debin (2016). The rise of a financial revolution in Republican China in 1900-1937: an institutional narrative. (Economic History working papers 235/2016). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ma, Debin (2019). Financial revolution in republican China during 1900–37: a survey and a new interpretation. Australian Economic History Review, 59(3), 242-262. https://doi.org/10.1111/aehr.12173 picture_as_pdf
  • Nath, Maanik (2021). Do institutional transplants succeed? Regulating raiffeisen cooperatives in South India, 1930-1960. Business History Review, 95(1), 59 - 85. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007680520000884 picture_as_pdf
  • Richards, John F. (2011). The finances of the East India Company in India, c. 1766-1859. (Working papers 153/11). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Rönnbäck, Klas, Broberg, Oskar, Galli, Stefania (2022). A colonial cash cow: the return on investments in British Malaya, 1889–1969. Cliometrica, 16(1), 149 - 173. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11698-021-00223-8 picture_as_pdf
  • Varian, Brian (2018). The economics of Edwardian imperial preference: what can New Zealand reveal? (Economic History working papers 281/2018). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • European Institute
  • Pamuk, Sevket (2012). Political power and institutional change: lessons from the Middle East. Economic History of Developing Regions, 27(s1), S41-S56. https://doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2012.657481
  • LSE
  • Hannah, Leslie, Kasuya, Makoto (2015). Twentieth century enterprise forms: Japan in comparative perspective. (Economic History working paper series 217/2015). London School of Economics and Political Science.