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

Grasping Reality on TypePad, by Brad DeLong

The current place where I am posting material is over on the SubStack: http://braddelong.substack.com

"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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