Divergent Paths: How Culture and Institutions Have Shaped North American Growth
Autor Marc Egnalen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 oct 1996
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780195109061
ISBN-10: 0195109066
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 15 figures, 7 tables, 4 maps
Dimensiuni: 157 x 235 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0195109066
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 15 figures, 7 tables, 4 maps
Dimensiuni: 157 x 235 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
"Wonderful comparisons of the three regions that have affected the U.S. economy since colonial times. Excellent integration of historical events and their impact on [the] U.S. economy."--Kevin T. Davis, Our Lady of the Lake University
"...we should be thankful for Marc Egnal's Divergent Paths. Egnal here looks at the big picture and has produced a provocative, ambitious, and curious book about the nature of economic development in North America from the nid-eighteenth century to the present....his exploration...will remain an excellent starting point for discussions on what accounted for economic development in North America."--Journal of American History
"The virtues of comparative history are much preached, but little practiced. Marc Egnal's Divergent Paths is a model of what might be done. It is crisp, clear-headed, and continuously enlightening for readers interested in Canada, the United States, and comparative history in general."--David Hackett Fischer, Brandeis University
"Marc Egnal's Divergent Paths is a fresh and original look at three very different North American regional responses to the challenge of modern economic growth. Adding French Canada to the mix is so informative that one wonders why it has not been done before. The book will get widespread attention, and deservedly so."--Gavin Wright, Stanford University
"[The author's] conclusions are carefully presented. [Divergent Paths] makes for very interesting reading. Works of this type are great fun to read and to argue about."--Journal of Comparative Economics
"a fascinating, scholarly, and intriguing account which enriches our understanding of the complexities of regional development."--The Journal of Economic History
"This is a provocative, well-written, and well-documented book which is a must read, if only because it reintroduces the question of the importance of culture and institutions as a causal determinant of economic development and growth to an understanding of North American economic history." --Business History Review
"This is a provcoative, valuable essay on a topic too long neglected by historians; it should be the starting point for a lively and salutary debate"--Journal of Southern History
"Based upon wide reading and thoughtful analysis, the volume is a useful case study of the cultural determinants of economic development"--Journal of Interdiscplinary History
"Within a relatively short compass Egnal provides considerable detail and comparative analysis.... This book is stimulating and thought-provoking."--Choice
"Divergent Paths...deserves a loud round of applause from all historians, simply because it takes a risk and grabs hold of a subject-economic growth-that has long been purely the province of the economists and economic historians and treats it as a topic in cultural and comparative history."--H-Net Reviews
"This is a provocative and erudite study. It deserves a wide readership."--American Historical Review
"This book is provocative, informative, and fun-to-read...In the end, the value of this book lies in the thought-provoking questions it raises, not with the definitive answers it provides...It is to Marc Egnal's credit that he raises these issues in such an interesting way."--EH.NET
"...provocative, ambitious, and curious....an excellent starting point for discussions on what accounted for economic development in North America."--The Journal of American History
"...we should be thankful for Marc Egnal's Divergent Paths. Egnal here looks at the big picture and has produced a provocative, ambitious, and curious book about the nature of economic development in North America from the nid-eighteenth century to the present....his exploration...will remain an excellent starting point for discussions on what accounted for economic development in North America."--Journal of American History
"The virtues of comparative history are much preached, but little practiced. Marc Egnal's Divergent Paths is a model of what might be done. It is crisp, clear-headed, and continuously enlightening for readers interested in Canada, the United States, and comparative history in general."--David Hackett Fischer, Brandeis University
"Marc Egnal's Divergent Paths is a fresh and original look at three very different North American regional responses to the challenge of modern economic growth. Adding French Canada to the mix is so informative that one wonders why it has not been done before. The book will get widespread attention, and deservedly so."--Gavin Wright, Stanford University
"[The author's] conclusions are carefully presented. [Divergent Paths] makes for very interesting reading. Works of this type are great fun to read and to argue about."--Journal of Comparative Economics
"a fascinating, scholarly, and intriguing account which enriches our understanding of the complexities of regional development."--The Journal of Economic History
"This is a provocative, well-written, and well-documented book which is a must read, if only because it reintroduces the question of the importance of culture and institutions as a causal determinant of economic development and growth to an understanding of North American economic history." --Business History Review
"This is a provcoative, valuable essay on a topic too long neglected by historians; it should be the starting point for a lively and salutary debate"--Journal of Southern History
"Based upon wide reading and thoughtful analysis, the volume is a useful case study of the cultural determinants of economic development"--Journal of Interdiscplinary History
"Within a relatively short compass Egnal provides considerable detail and comparative analysis.... This book is stimulating and thought-provoking."--Choice
"Divergent Paths...deserves a loud round of applause from all historians, simply because it takes a risk and grabs hold of a subject-economic growth-that has long been purely the province of the economists and economic historians and treats it as a topic in cultural and comparative history."--H-Net Reviews
"This is a provocative and erudite study. It deserves a wide readership."--American Historical Review
"This book is provocative, informative, and fun-to-read...In the end, the value of this book lies in the thought-provoking questions it raises, not with the definitive answers it provides...It is to Marc Egnal's credit that he raises these issues in such an interesting way."--EH.NET
"...provocative, ambitious, and curious....an excellent starting point for discussions on what accounted for economic development in North America."--The Journal of American History