• Jeremy Atack and Fred Bateman, “Land and the Development of Mid-19th Century American Agriculture in the Northern States”
  • Stephen DeCanio, “Labor Mobility and Peonage in the Postbellum South”
  • Trevor Dick, “Consumer Behavior in the 19th Century: Ontario Workers 1885-1889”
  • Scott Eddie, “From Tax Exemption to Tax Favoritism? The Nobility’s Holdings of Agriculture circa 1910”
  • Barry Eichengreen and Jeffrey Sachs, “Exchange Rates and Economic Recovery in the 1930s”
  • Stefano Fenoaltea, “Public Works Construction in Italy, 1861-1913: New Evidence on the International Kuznets Cycle”
  • George Grantham, “Agricultural Growth During the Industrial Revolution–Evidence from Mid-19th Century France”
  • Elizabeth Hoffman and Ann Carlos, “Bargaining to a Joint Profit-Maximum Duopoly Contract Under Noncomplete Information: A Case Study from the North American Fur Trade, 1804-1821”
  • Takenori Inoki, “The Opening of Railways and the Decline of Commercial City–The Case of Ohtsu City in Japan: 1880-1894”
  • William Kennedy, “Portfolio Behavior and Economic Development in the Late 19th Century–A Comparison of Great Britain and Germany: Hypothesis and Conjecture”
  • Bradley Lewis, “Waterways, Railroads and Public Choice in the 19th Century U.S.”
  • Gary Libecap, “Did the Texas Railroad Commission Cartelize Crude Oil Production between 1933 and 1973?”
  • Robert McGuire and Robert Ohsfeldt, “Self-Interest, Voting Behavior and the Ratification of the U.S. Constitution”
  • Mary MacKinnon, “Poor Law Policy, Unemployment and Pauperism”
  • Matao Miyamoto, “The Development of the Rice Market in Tokugawa Japan”
  • Jon Moen, “Changes in the Productivity of Southern Agriculture: 1860 to 1880”
  • John Nye, “Firm Size and Economic Backwardness: A New Look at the French Industrialization Debate”
  • Cormac O’Grada and J. Peter Neary, “Protection, Economic War, and Structural Change: The 1930s in Ireland”
  • Donald Paterson and Ronald Shearer, “The Money Supply in Mid-19th Century Canada: Estimates and Their Implications”
  • Hugh Rockoff and Geofrey Mills, “Price Controls in the U.S. and the U.K. During World War II”
  • Graeme Donald Snooks and John McDonald, “How Artificial Were the Tax Assessments in Doomesday England? The Case of Essex”
  • Kenneth Snowden, “Random Walk Tests of the American Stock Market, 1871-1913”
  • Richard Sutch and Roger L. Ransom, “Retirement, Occupational Change and Old Age Dependency Among American Workers of the Late 19th Century”
  • John Wallis and Dan Benjamin, “Did FDR Prolong the Great Depression?”
  • Peter Wardley, “Productivity, Mechanization, and the Labour Market in the Extractive Industries of the North East of England, 1874-1914”
  • Martha Weidner Williams, “Improvements in Western European Diets and Economic Growth”
  • David Weir, “Markets and Mortality in France”
  • Eugene White, “Financing the French Revolution: A New Look at the Assignat Inflation”