European Historical Economics Society (registered with the Charity Commissioners for England and Wales)
Papers on line all'indirizzo web:
https://ehes.org/working-papers/
consistenza working papers: n. 1-
[ 300-201 ] [ 200-101 ] [ 100-1 ]
Paper No. 200:
Regional market integration and the emergence of a Scottish national grain market
by Daniel Cassidy, National University of Ireland, Galway; Nick Hanley, University of Glasgow.
November 2020.
Paper No. 199:
The Pre-kautilyan Period: a sustainable model through ancient economic ideas and practices
by Satish Deodhar, Indian Institute of Management (Ahmedabad); Sriram Balasubramanian, International Monetary Fund (IMF).
November 2020.
Paper No. 198:
Accounting for Growth in Spain, 1850-2019
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III and CEPR; Joan R. Rosés, LSE and CEPR.
October 2020.
Paper No. 197:
Capital in Spain, 1850-2019
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III and CEPR.
October 2020.
Paper No. 196:
Lordships, state capacity and beyond: literacy rates in mid-nineteenth-century Valencia
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Alfonso Díez-Minguela, Universitat de València; Alicia Gómez-Tello, Universitat de València and IVIE; Julio Martinez-Galarraga, Universitat de València; Daniel A. Tirado-Fabregat, Universitat de València.
September 2020.
Paper No. 195:
Builders' Working Time in Eighteenth Century Madrid
by Mario García-Zúñiga, University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU.
September 2020.
Paper No. 194:
Is there a Refugee Gap? Evidence from Over a Century of Danish Naturalizations
by Nina Boberg-Fazlic, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
August 2020.
Paper No. 193:
Epidemics, inequality and poverty in preindustrial and early industrial times
by Guido Alfani, Bocconi University, Department of Social and Political Science, Dondena Centre and IGIER.
August 2020.
Paper No. 192:
The two Revolutions in Economic History
by Martina Cioni, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Siena; Giovanni Federico, Division of Social Sciences, NYUAD and CEPR; Michelangelo Vasta, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Siena.
August 2020.
Paper No. 191:
Populism and the First Wave of Globalization: Evidence from the 1892 US Presidential Election
by Alexander Klein, University of Kent, CAGE, CEPR; Karl Gunnar Persson, University of Copenhagen; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
July 2020.
Paper No. 190:
The Feudal Origins of Manorial Prosperity in 11th-century England
by Vincent Delabastita, Department of Economics, KU Leuven; Sebastiaan Maes, Department of Economics, KU Leuven.
July 2020.
Paper No. 189:
Paesani versus Paisanos: The Relative Failure of Spanish Immigrants in Buenos Aires during the Age of Mass Migration
by Leticia Arroyo Abad, City University of New York; Noel Maurer, George Washington University; Blanca Sánchez-Alonso, Universidad San Pablo-CEU.
June 2020.
Paper No. 188:
Blowing against the Wind? A Narrative Approach to Central Bank Foreign Exchange Intervention
by Alain Naef, University of California, Berkeley.
June 2020.
Paper No. 187:
Denmark and Russia: What can we learn from the historical comparison of two great Arctic agricultural empires?
by Elena Korchmina, NYU Abu Dhabi, Higher School of Economics (Moscow); Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
June 2020.
Paper No. 186:
Death, sex and fertility: Female infanticide in rural Spain, 1750-1950
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Francisco J. Marco-Gracia, Universidad de Zaragoza.
June 2020.
Paper No. 185:
Growth, War, and Pandemics: Europe in the Very Long-run
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III and CEPR; Carlos-Vladimir Rodríguez-Caballero, IITAM, Mexico, and CREATES, Aarhus University.
May 2020.
Paper No. 184:
Economic Effects of the Black Death: Spain in European Perspective
by Carlos Álvarez-Nogal, Universidad Carlos III; Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III, CEPR; Carlos Santiago-Caballero, Universidad Carlos III.
May 2020.
Paper No. 183:
Success through failure? Four Centuries of Searching for Danish Coal
by Kristin Ranestad, Lund University; Paul Richard Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
May 2020.
Paper No. 182:
Arresting the Sword of Damocles: Dating the Transition to the Post-Malthusian Era in Denmark
by Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern Denmark; Maja Uhre Pedersen, University of Southern Denmark; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Richard Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR
April 2020.
Paper No. 181:
Ad maiorem Dei gloriam. Numeracy levels in the Guarani Jesuit missions
by Èric Gómez-i-Aznar, Universitat de Barcelona
April 2020.
Paper No. 180:
Standards of Living and Skill Premia in Eighteenth Century Denmark: What can we learn from a large microlevel wage database?
by Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern Denmark; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR
April 2020.
Paper No. 179:
The Fruits of El Dorado: The Global Impact of American Precious Metals
by Leticia Arroyo Abad, City University of New York - Queens College; Nuno Palma, University of Manchester, Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa, CEPR
April 2020.
Paper No. 178:
Winners and Losers from Enclosure: Evidence from Danish Land Inequality 1682-1895
by Nina Boberg-Fazlic, University of Southern Denmark; Markus Lampe, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, CEPR; Pablo Martinelli Lasheras, Universidad Carlos III Madrid; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
April 2020.
Paper No. 177:
Growth Recurring in Preindustrial Spain: Half a Millennium Perspective
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III and CEPR; Carlos Álvarez-Nogal, Universidad Carlos III; Carlos Santiago-Caballero, Universidad Carlos III.
March 2020.
Paper No. 176:
A "Silent Revolution": school reforms and Italy's educational gender gap in the Liberal Age (1861-1921)
by Gabriele Cappelli, University of Siena; Michelangelo Vasta, University of Siena.
Februar 2020.
Paper No. 175:
The rise of coffee in the Brazilian southeast: tariffs and foreign market potential, 1827-40
by Christopher David Absell, Departamento de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid.
January 2020.
Paper No. 174:
American Precious Metals and their Consequences for Early Modern Europe
by Nuno Palma, University of Manchester, Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa, CEPR.
December 2019.
Paper No. 173:
The uneven transition towards universal literacy in Spain, 1860-1930
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Alfonso Díez-Minguela, University of Valencia; Julio Martínez-Galarraga, University of Valencia; Daniel A. Tirado, University of Valencia.
December 2019.
Paper No. 172:
'All little girls, the bad luck!' Sex ratios and gender discrimination in 19th-century Greece
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Michail Raftakis, Newcastle University.
November 2019.
Paper No. 171:
Comparative European Institutions and the Little Divergence, 1385-1800
by António Henriques, Universidade do Porto and CEPESE; Nuno Palma, University of Manchester, Universidade de Lisboa, CEPR.
November 2019.
Paper No. 170:
The vagaries of the sea: evidence on the real effects of money from maritime disasters in the Spanish Empire
by Adam Brzezinski, University of Oxford; Yao Chen, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Nuno Palma, University of Manchester, Universidade de Lisboa, CEPR; Felix Ward, Erasmus University Rotterdam.
November 2019.
Paper No. 169:
From West to East: Bolivian Regional GDPs since the 1950s. A story of Natural Resources and Infrastructure
by José A Peres-Cajías, Universitat de Barcelona.
October 2019.
Paper No. 168:
Reconstruction of regional and national population using intermittent census-type data: the case of Portugal, 1527-1864
by Nuno Palma, University of Manchester, Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa, CEPR; Jaime Reis, Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa; Mengtian Zhang, London School of Economics.
September 2019.
Paper No. 167:
"Cholera Forcing" and the Urban Water Infrastructure: Lessons from Historical Berlin
by Kalle Kappner, Institute for Economic History, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.
September 2019.
Paper No. 166:
The impact of border changes and protectionism on real wages in early modern Scania
by Kathryn E. Gary, Lund University; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark.
July 2019.
Paper No. 165:
The Fetters of Inheritance? Equal Partition and Regional Economic Development
by Thilo R. Huning, University of York; Fabian Wahl, University of Hohenheim.
July 2019.
Paper No. 166:
The impact of border changes and protectionism on real wages in early modern Scania
by Kathryn E. Gary, Lund University; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark.
July 2019.
Paper No. 165:
The Fetters of Inheritance? Equal Partition and Regional Economic Development
by Thilo R. Huning, University of York; Fabian Wahl, University of Hohenheim.
July 2019.
Paper No. 164:
Capital Flow Bonanzas as a Fundamental Ingredient in Spain's Financial Crises, 1850-2015
by Concha Betrán, University of Valencia; Maria A. Pon, University of Valencia.
July 2019.
Paper No. 163:
Economic Development in Spain, 1815-2017
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III, CEPR; Blanca Sánchez-Alonso, Universidad San Pablo-CEU.
July 2019.
Paper No. 162:
Days Worked and Seasonality Patterns of Work in Eighteenth Century Denmark
by Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern Denmark; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Richard Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
July 2019.
Paper No. 161:
Do the Right Thing! Leaders, Weather Shocks and Social Conflicts in Pre-Industrial France
by Cédric Chambru, Department of Economics, University of Zurich.
July 2019.
Paper No. 160:
Sex ratios and missing girls in late-19th-century Europe
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Department of Historical Studies, Norwegian University of Science and Technology.
June 2019.
Paper No. 159:
A Microlevel Wage Dataset for Eighteenth Century Denmark
by Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern Denmark; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
June 2019.
Paper No. 158:
High Wages or Wages For Energy? An Alternative View of The British Case (1645-1700)
by José L. Martínez González, University of Barcelona.
June 2019.
Paper No. 157:
Human Development in the Age of Globalisation
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III, CEPR, Groningen.
June 2019.
Paper No. 156:
Malthus in Pre-industrial Northern Italy? A Cointegration Approach
by Maja Pedersen, University of Southern Denmark; Claudia Riani, I.R.T.A. - Leonardo, Pisa; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark.
June 2019.
Paper No. 155:
Immigrant Communities and Knowledge Spillovers: Danish-Americans and the Development of the Dairy Industry in the United States
by Nina Boberg-Fazlic, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark.
June 2019.
Paper No. 154:
The Past's Long Shadow. A Systematic Review and Network Analysis of Cliometrics or the New Economic History
by Gregori Galofré-Vilà, University of Bocconi.
May 2019.
Paper No. 153:
Trade in the Shadow of Power: Japanese Industrial Exports in the Interwar years
by Alejandro Ayuso-Díaz, Universidad Carlos III; Antonio Tena-Junguito, Universidad Carlos III.
May 2019.
Paper No. 152:
Building Workers in Madrid (1737-1805). New Wage Series and Working Lives
by Mario García-Zúñiga, University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU; Ernesto López-Losa, University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU.
May 2019.
Paper No. 151:
Full steam ahead: Insider knowledge, stock trading and the nationalization of the railways in Prussia around 1879
by Michael Buchner, University of Saarland; Tobias A. Jopp, University of Regensburg.
March 2019.
Paper No. 150:
Fading Legacies: Human Capital in the Aftermath of the Partitions of Poland
by Andreas Backhaus, Centre for European Policy Studies.
March 2019.
Paper No. 149:
Quantification and Revolution: An Investigation of German Capital Flight after the First World War
by Christophe Farquet, Swiss National Foundation, Département d'histoire contemporaine, Université de Fribourg, Switzerland.
March 2019.
Paper No. 148:
Without coal in the age of steam and dams in the age of electricity: an explanation for the failure of Portugal to industrialize before the Second World War
by Sofia Teives Henriques, Lund University; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR.
March 2019.
Paper No. 147:
Money and modernization in early modern England
by Nuno Palma, University of Manchester and CEPR.
February 2019.
Paper No. 146:
Class, education and social mobility: Madrid, 1880-1905
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Santiago de Miguel Salanova, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
January 2019.
Paper No. 145:
Is there a Latin American agricultural growth pattern?Factor endowments and productivity in the second half of the twentieth century
by Miguel Martín-Retortillo, Universidad de Alcalá; Vicente Pinilla, Universidad de Zaragoza and Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón (IA2); Jackeline Velazco, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú; Henry Willebald, Universidad de la República.
January 2019.
Paper No. 144:
Peer Pressure: The Puzzle of Tax Compliance in the Early Nineteenth-Century Russia
by Elena Korchmina, New York University Abu Dhabi.
December 2018.
Paper No. 143:
Economic consequences of state failure; Legal capacity, regulatory activity, and market integration in Poland, 1505-1772
by Mikolaj Malinowski, Lund University / Utrecht University.
December 2018.
Paper No. 142:
Testing for normality in truncated anthropometric samples
by Antonio Fidalgo, HS-Fresenius University of Applied Sciences.
December 2018.
Paper No. 141:
Financial intermediation cost, rents, and productivity: An international comparison
by Guillaume Bazot, Université Paris 8.
November 2018.
Paper No. 140:
The introduction of serfdom and labour markets
by Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern Denmark; Cristina Victoria Radu, University of Southern Denmark; Battista Severgnini, Copenhagen Business School; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE and CEPR.
November 2018.
Paper No. 139:
Two stories, one fate: Age-heaping and literacy in Spain, 1877-1930
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Alfonso Díez-Minguela, Universitat de València; Julio Martinez-Galarraga, Universitat de València; Daniel A. Tirado-Fabregat, Universitat de València.
October 2018.
Paper No. 138:
Two Worlds of Female Labour: Gender Wage Inequality in Western Europe, 1300-1800
by Alexandra M. de Pleijt, University of Oxford ; Jan Luiten van Zanden, Utrecht University .
October 2018.
Paper No. 137:
From Convergence to Divergence:Portuguese Economic Growth, 1527-1850
by Nuno Palma, University of Manchester and CEPR; Jaime Reis, Universidade de Lisboa.
August 2018.
Paper No. 136:
The Big Bang: Stock Market Capitalization in the Long Run
by Dmitry Kuvshinov, University of Bonn; Kaspar Zimmermann, University of Bonn.
August 2018.
Paper No. 135:
The Great Moderation of Grain Price Volatility: Market Integration vs. Climate Change, Germany, 1650-1790
by Hakon Albers, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg; Ulrich Pfister, University of Münster; Martin Uebele.
August 2018.
Paper No. 134:
The age of mass migration in Latin America
by Blanca Sánchez-Alonso, Universidad CEU-San Pablo.
July 2018.
Paper No. 133:
Gravity and Migration before Railways: Evidence from Parisian Prostitutes and Revolutionaries
by Morgan Kelly, University College Dublin, CAGE and CEPR; Cormac Ó Gráda, University College Dublin and CAGE.
June 2018.
Paper No. 132:
On the economics of forced labour. Did the employment of Prisoners-of-War depress German coal mining productivity in World War I?
by Tobias A. Jopp, University of Regensburg.
May 2018.
Paper No. 131:
Well-being Inequality in the Long Run
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III and CEPR.
May 2018.
Paper No. 130:
The Napoleonic Wars: A Watershed in Spanish History?
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III and CEPR; Carlos Santiago-Caballero, Universidad Carlos III.
April 2018.
Paper No. 129:
A New Indicator for Describing Bull and Bear Markets
by German Forero-Laverde, Universitat de Barcelona.
April 2018.
Paper No. 128:
The long run impact of foreign direct investment, exports, imports and GDP: evidence for Spain from an ARDL approach
by Verónica Cañal-Fernández, University of Oviedo; Julio Tascón Fernández, University of Oviedo.
March 2018.
Paper No. 127:
Can Autocracy Promote Literacy? Evidence from a Cultural Alignment Success Story
by Nuno Palma, University of Manchester and CEPR; Jaime Reis, ICS, University of Lisbon.
March 2018.
Paper No. 126:
The Origins of the (Cooperative) Species: Raiffeisen Banking in the Netherlands, 1898-1909
by Christopher L. Colvin, Queen´s University Belfast; Stuart Henderson, Dublin Institute of Technology; John D. Turner, Queen´s University Belfast.
March 2018.
Paper No. 125:
'Getting to Denmark': the Role of Elites for Development
by Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern Denmark; Markus Lampe, Vienna University of Economics and Business; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR; Christian Volmar Skovsgaard, University of Southern Denmark.
February 2018.
Paper No. 124:
How to become a leader in an emerging new global market: The determinants of French wine exports, 1848-1938
by María Isabel Ayuda, Universidad de Zaragoza; Hugo Ferrer-Pérez, CREDA-UPC-IRTA; Vicente Pinilla, Universidad de Zaragoza and Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón (IA2).
February 2018.
Paper No. 123:
Still a long way to go: decomposing income inequality across Italy's regions, 1871 - 2011
by Gabriele Cappelli, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Emanuele Felice, Università "G. D'Annunzio" di Chieti-Pescara; Julio Martínez-Galarraga, Universitat de València; Daniel Tirado, Universitat de València.
January 2018.
Paper No. 121:
Unreal wages? Real income and economic growth in england, 1260-1850
by Jane Humphries, University of Oxford; Jacob Weisdorf, University of Southern Denmark.
December 2017.
Paper No. 120:
The Gains from Import Variety in Two Globalisations: Evidence from Germany
by Wolf-Fabian Hungerland, Humboldt-University zu Berlin.
December 2017.
Paper No. 119:
The long-term relationship between economic development and regional inequality: South-West Europe, 1860-2010.
by Alfonso Díez-Minguela, Universitat de València; Rafael González-Val, Universidad de Zaragoza, IEB; Julio Martinez-Galarraga, Universitat de València; M. Teresa Sanchis, Universitat de València; Daniel A. Tirado, Universitat de València.
December 2017.
Paper No. 118:
Openness and growth in a historical perspective: a VECM approach.
by Giovanni Federico, University of Pisa, CEPR; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CAGE, CEPR; Antonio Tena-Junguito, Universidad Carlos III Madrid.
December 2017.
Paper No. 117:
The Bank of England as Lender of Last Resort: New historical evidence from daily transactional data.
by Mike Anson, David Bholat, Miao Kang, Ryland Thomas, Bank of England.
November 2017.
Paper No. 116:
Harbingers of Modernity: Monetary Injections and European Economic Growth, 1492-1790.
by Nuno Palma, University of Manchester.
November 2017.
Paper No. 115:
'Rational' Farmers and the Emergence of Modern Accounting in Danish Dairying.
by Markus Lampe, Vienna University of Economics and Business; Paul Sharp, University of Southern Denmark, CEPR.
October 2017.
Paper No. 114:
Missed opportunities? The development of human welfare in Western Europe, 1913-1950.
by Daniel Gallardo Albarra´n, University of Groningen.
June 2017.
Paper No. 113:
Portugal's wine globalization waves, 1750-2015.
by Pedro Lains, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon.
May 2017.
Paper No. 112:
Effects of reforms and supervisory organizations: Evidence from the Ottoman Empire and the Istanbul bourse.
by Elmas Yaldiz Hanedar, Yeditepe University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Istanbul, Turkey; Avni Önder Hanedar, Sakarya University, Faculty of Political Sciences, Sakarya, Turkey and Dokuz Eylül University, Faculty of Business, Izmir, Turkey; Ferdi Çelikay, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Eskisehir, Turkey.
April 2017.
Paper No. 111:
Resource endowments and agricultural commercialization in colonial Africa: Did labour seasonality and food security drive Uganda's cotton revolution?.
by Michiel de Haas, Wageningen University; Kostadis J. Papaioannou, London School of Economics & Political Science.
April 2017.
Paper No. 110:
Currency Valuations, Retaliation and Trade Conflicts Evidence from Interwar France.
by Thilo Albers, Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science. Macrohistory Lab, University of Bonn.
April 2017.
Paper No. 109:
Measuring Extractive Institutions: Colonial Trade and Price Gaps in French Africa.
by Federico Tadei, Department of Economic History, Universitat de Barcelona.
March 2017.
Paper No. 108:
Between war and peace: The Ottoman economy and foreign exchange trading at the Istanbul bourse.
by Avni Önder Hanedar, Sakarya University, Faculty of Political Sciences, Sakarya-Turkey Dokuz Eylül University, Faculty of Business, Izmir-Turkey; Hatice Gaye, Gencer Yeditepe University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Istanbul-Turkey; Sercan Demiralay, Istanbul Gelisim University, Faculty of Economics, Business Administration and Social Sciences, Istanbul-Turkey; Ismail Altay, Recep Tayyip Erdogan University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Rize-Turkey.
February 2017.
Paper No. 107:
Why did Argentina become a super-exporter of agricultural and food products during the Belle Époque (1880- 1929)?
by Vicente Pinilla, Universidad de Zaragoza and IA2; Agustina Rayes, Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires and CONICET.
January 2017.
Paper No. 106:
Plague and long-term development: the lasting effects of the 1629-30 epidemic on the Italian cities.
by Guido Alfani PAM, Università Bocconi (Italy) Dondena Centre and IGIER; Marco Percoco PAM, Università Bocconi (Italy) Dondena Centre.
November 2016.
Paper No. 105:
The mining sectors in Chile and Norway, ca. 1870 - 1940: the development of a knowledge gap.
by Kristin Ranestad, Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History, University of Oslo, and Centre for Business History, Copenhagen Business School.
November 2016
Paper No. 104:
Accounting for the 'Little Divergence' What drove economic growth in pre-industrial Europe, 1300-1800?
by Alexandra M. de Pleijt, Utrecht University; Jan Luiten van Zanden, Utrecht University.
November 2016.
Paper No. 103:
Spain's Historical National Accounts: Expenditure and Output, 1850-2015.
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III, CEPR, and Groningen.
September 2016.
Paper No. 102:
Darwin beats Malthus: Medicalization, Evolutionary Anthropology and the Demographic Transition.
by Katharina Mühlhoff, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid.
September 2016.
Paper No. 101:
You Reap What You Know: Observability of Soil Quality, and Political Fragmentation.
by Thilo R. Huning, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin; Fabian Wahl, University of Hohenheim.
September 2016.