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Grasping Reality by Brad DeLong
Archives Highlighted Previous Edit COVID Market for Man Slavery 20th C. Reading 'Chicago'

Grasping Reality by Brad DeLong

"Gunpowder Empires" BaseCamp Page

  • Thinking About "Premature Deindustrialization": An Intellectual Toolkit I
  • "Gunpowder Empires"
  • Review for Nature of: Joel Mokyr: "A Culture of Growth"
  • Is the Semi-Permanent "Gunpowder Empire" Historical Scenario Plausible? Perhaps Not...
  • "Gunpowder Empire": Should We Generalize Mark Elvin's High-Level Equilibrium Trap?
  • Ian Morris: Why the West Rules--for Now: The Patterns of History, and What They Reveal About the Future: The Economic History Research Frontier: A Great Recent Books Approach
    • Ian Morris: Why the West Rules--for Now: The Patterns of History, and What They Reveal About the Future
    • Ian Morris: Foragers, Farmers, and Fossil Fuels: How Human Values Evolve
    • Ken Pomeranz: How Big Should Historians Think?
    • Ken Pomeranz: Beyond the East-West Binary: Restating Development Paths in the Eighteenth Century World
    • David Christian: Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History
  • 2015-02-11 Economic Growth in the Very Longest Run
  • 2016-07-27--Gunpowder Empires
    • Robert C. Allen: The British Industrial Revolution in Global Perspective: How Commerce Created The Industrial Revolution and Modern Economic Growth
    • Michael Kremer: Population Growth and Technological Change: One Million B.C. to 1990 on JSTOR
    • Mark Elvin: The Pattern of the Chinese Past
    • Paul M. Romer: Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth
    • Gunpowder Empires' Military Capacity and Ian Morris
      • Tonio Andrade: Garbage In, Garbage Out: Challenges of Model Building in Global History, A Military Historical Perspective
    • Remi Jedwab and Dietrich Vollrath: Urbanization without Growth in Historical Perspective
  • Where Was China?: Why the Twentieth-Century Was Not a Chinese Century: A Deleted Scene from My "Slouching Towards Utopia?: The Economic History of the Twentieth Century" Ms.
  • Slouching Towards Utopia: The Economic World of the Twentieth Century: Pre-WWI China
  • Hoisted from the Archives (1998): Review of David S. Landes: "The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Are Some So Rich and Others So Poor?"
  • FILED NOTE: Barry Eichengreen and Cosma Shalizi
  • Philip Hoffman: Why Did Europe Conquer the World?: The Economic History Research Frontier: A Great Recent Books Approach
    • Philip T. Hoffman: Why Was It Europeans Who Conquered the World?
    • Philip Hoffman: Why Did Europe Conquer the World?
    • Patrick O’Brien: Ten Years of Debate on the Origins of the Great Divergence
    • Jack Goldstone: The Rise of the West--or Not? A Revision to Socio-Economic History
    • G. John Ikenberry: Review of 'Why Did Europe Conquer the World?'

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