The European Review of Economic History is a major outlet for research in economic history. Articles cover the whole range of economic history -- papers on European, non-European, comparative and world economic history are all welcome. Contributions shed new light on existing debates, raise new or previously neglected topics, and provide fresh perspectives from comparative research. The Review includes full-length articles, shorter articles, notes and comments, debates, survey articles, and review articles. It also publishes notes and announcements from the European Historical Economics Society.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Articles
Does military pressure boost fiscal capacity? Evidence from late-modern military revolutions in Europe and North America Oriol Sabaté European Review of Economic History 2016 20: 275–298
Reverse assimilation? Immigrants in the Canadian labour market during the Great Depression Kris Inwood, Chris Minns, and Fraser Summerfield European Review of Economic History 2016 20: 299–321
War, housing rents, and free market: Berlin's rental housing during World War I Konstantin A. Kholodilin European Review of Economic History 2016 20: 322–344
Little Divergence revisited: Polish weighted real wages in a European perspective, 1500–1800 Mikołaj Malinowski European Review of Economic History 2016 20: 345–367
Estimating the shares of secondary- and tertiary-sector outputs in the age of early modern growth: the case of Japan, 1600–1874 Osamu Saito and Masanori Takashima European Review of Economic History 2016 20: 368–386