CLCF1
                                    LanguageENG
                                    PublishYear2012
                                
                                    publishCompany
                                    Cambridge University Press
                                
                                
                                    EISBN
                                    9781139848473
                                
                                
                                    PISBN
                                    9781107030701
                                
                                
                            - Product Details
 - Contents
 
                                Why did some countries and regions of Europe reach high levels of economic advancement in the nineteenth century, while others were left behind? This new transnational survey of the continent's economic development highlights the role of regional differences in shaping each country's economic path and outcome. Presenting a clear and cogent explanation of the historical causes of advancement and backwardness, Ivan Berend integrates social, political, institutional and cultural factors as well as engaging in debates about the relative roles of knowledge, the state and institutions. Featuring boxed essays on key personalities including Adam Smith, Friedrich List, Gustave Eiffel and the Krupp family, as well as brief histories of innovations such as the steam engine, vaccinations and the co-operative system, the book helps to explain the theories and macro-economic trends that dominated the century and their impact on the subsequent development of the European economy right up to the present day.
                        
                    
                    
                        Collected by
                    - UCLA
 - Princeton University
 - University College London
 - University of Cambridge
 - University of Oxford
 - Stanford University
 - MIT
 - UCB
 
                
            