Call for papers: The 2023 Datini-Ester seminar deals with Economic Exchanges. The aims are encourage research on the exchange of goods and services, on the role of markets, monies, trade, transaction costs and institutional contexts, which might foster market integration or, alternatively, constrain economic performance. Purpose is to clarify the role of the economic exchange and market in past economies.
List of participants
- Mathias Istrup Karlsmose, Internationalizing the Danish East India Company – Trade, Diplomacy and Warfare in 17th Century Asia
- Bram Hilkens, Living and Dying with the Land: Land Inequality, Agrarian Capitalism, and Epidemic Mortality
- Florian Probst, Was there an Industrious Revolution in Germany? Wages and labour markets on rural estates, c. 1650-1870
- Boyu Fang, The economic status of ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia: trade, social networks, remittances, and entrepreneurship
- Carlo Ludovico Severgnini, Financial Administration and Reforms in Burgundy and Savoy (1418-1480)
- Tomasso Brollo, Money and Credit in Early Modern Europe. The banco Capponi in Florence and at the fairs of Lyon and Besançon, 1553-1584
- Tessa de Boer, A Truth Universally Acknowledged. Dutch ventures in the French West Indies, 1717-1792
- Elena Shadrina, A Sea of Parchment: Documentary Culture and Social Networks in Venice and Beyond (950- 1220)
- Laura Burnett, « For change and charitie »: how were 17th century trade tokens used and understood by people at the time?
- Patrick van der Geest, Trading colonialism for imperialism: How Hope & Co. shaped the advent of European imperial exploitation in Asia and the Atlantic, c.a 1720-1880
- Claudio Ferri, From imaginary money to metallic standards
- Ramona Negrón, Amsterdam Merchants in the Spanish Americas, 1580-1700
- Sally Finn-Kelcy, The Production and Export of Medieval Ireland’s Wool and Woollen Cloth
- Aditi Dixit, The ‘Little Asian’ Divergence: A Comparative Study of the Indian and Japanese Textile Industry, ca. 1890-1940
- Gustav Ängeby, Scandinavian merchant networks in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean, c.1750-1815
Experts
- Guido Alfani (Bocconi University Milano)
- Francesco Ammannati (Bocconi University Milano)
- Catia Antunes (Leiden University)
- William Caferro (Vanderbilt University – Nashville, USA)
- Ben Gales (Groningen University)
- Corinne Maitte (Université Gustave Eiffel, Champs-sur-Marne)
- Jaco Zuijderduijn (Lund University)