ASSA January 1996: Cliometric Society Sessions
Directory of Authors
Conference Sessions
- Carter, Susan (UC-Riverside) and Richard Sutch (UC-Berkeley): Fixing the
Facts: Editing of the 1880 U.S. Census Of Occupations With Implications For
Long-Term Labor Force Trends and the Sociology Of Official Statistics
- Clark, Gregory (UC-Davis): The Political Foundations of Modern Economic
Growth: England 1540-1800
- Craft, Erik (Richmond): The Value of Weather Information During the Early Years
of the Weather Bureau
- Easterlin, Richard (Southern California): Is Economic Growth the Engine Driving
Improved Life Expectancy?
- Fishback, Price and Shawn Kantor (Arizona and NBER): The Adoption of Workers'
Compensation in the United States, 1900-1930
- Haupert, Michael (Wisconsin-LaCrosse) and Howard Bodenhorn (Lafayette): The
Question of Note Issue in American Free Banks
- Kiesling, Lynne (William and Mary): Self Insurance and Response to Industrial
Downturns: Co-operative Societies and Able-bodied Assistance of the
Non-able-bodied in Victorian Britain
- Kinghorn, Janice Rye (Washington U): Kartell or Cartel? Evidence from Turn of
the Century German Coal, Iron, and Steel Industries
- Lothian, James R. (Fordham): Capital Market Integration and Exchange-Rate
Regimes in Historical Perspective
- Motomura, Akira (Stonehill): Political Institutions and the Spanish Monarchy's
Finances 1521-1648
- Nonnenmacher, Tomas W. (Illinois): Network Quality and Integration in the
Telegraph Industry, 1852-1861
- Raff, Daniel (Pennsylvania) and Manuel Trajtenberg (n/a): Quality-Adjusted
Prices for the American Automobile Industry, 1906-1940: Considering Cars as
New Goods
- Rosenbloom, Joshua (Kansas): The Extent of the Labor Market in the Postbellum
United States
- Suzuki, Masao (Mills): Counting the Uncounted: Japanese Undocumented
Immigration to the United States Before World War II
- Triner, Gail (Rutgers): Banking on the Periphery: Brazil, 1906-1930
- Ziliak, Stephen (University of Iowa): The Contradiction of Compassion: Private
Charity and the 'Solution' to Dependence