24/11/2023 Hillary Vipond – QUCEH Seminar Series
Grandfathered Out: Sheltering from Technological Unemployment in Victorian Britain Hillary is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Economic History at the London
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Grandfathered Out: Sheltering from Technological Unemployment in Victorian Britain Hillary is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Economic History at the London
Brokers in Turbulent Economies: Trust in Flux Emily Buchnea is an Associate Professor at Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University. https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/our-staff/b/emily-buchnea/
‘I told you so!’ How economics can use the past to predict the future On November 2nd at 17:00, CEPH will host ‘I Told You So’:
Why did shareholder liability disappear? David Bogle is a Lecturer (Education) in Finance at Queen’s University Belfast. https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/persons/david-bogle-2
The Context Effect: Why Policymakers and Corporate Executives Need You to Make Better Decisions Laurence Mussio is a co-founder and director of the Long Run Institute.
The Impact of the Thirty Years’ War on Urban Germany Victoria Gierok is a tutor in economic history at the Faculty of History, University
CEPH was delighted to host our Inaugural Workshop on Thursday 1st and Friday 2nd June 2023 at Riddel Hall, Queen’s University Belfast. Speakers included: Dan
How Local Knowledge Fueled Colonial Settlement and Long-Run Economic Activity: Evidence from Australia
Mind your language: the decline of Irish in the nineteenth century
Business Partnerships in a British Industrial City: The case of Glasgow 1861-1881
Conflict and Gender Norms: Evidence from India
`Evil´ Speculators? Evidence from Grain Futures Trading in Chicago During the Interwar Period
‘A Serious Evil’ – Anticipation, patent examination and novel innovation in Britain, 1853-1902