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Economic History Graduate Webinar – Spring 2025

YSI-EHES Economic History Graduate Webinar

Start time:

May 1 @ 5:00 pm - June 19 @ 6:00 pm

project Series Event Series (See All)

CEST

Location:

Online

Type:

Presentation series

project Series Event Series (See All)

How to attend

Mark yourself as attending to receive the zoom link via email

Description

We are launching a new YSI-EHES Economic History Graduate Webinar edition next Spring. As in previous editions, we provide a platform for young researchers to present their ongoing work and get feedback from senior scholars. The online format has made exchanges among people from different regions and research areas possible, offering early-stage researchers an important venue. 

If you are interested in attending the webinar and receiving the program, please register using this form. We will get in touch with you as soon as we can.

Program Spring 2025

  • April 10. Louis Henderson (London School of Economics): Was there a family economics before 1870?Marital birth control in a long-running natural experiment, London. Chair: Matthew Curtis (University of Southern Denmark)
  • April 17. Chen Lin (University of Bonn): Public Transportation and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from Early 20th-Century Manhattan. Chair: Santiago Perez (UC Davis Department of Economics)
  • April 24. Anne Shaller (Vanderbilt University): Procompetitive Effects of State Antitrust Laws: Evidence from the Progressive Era. Chair: Karen Clay (Carnegie Mellon University)
  • May 1. Andrés Martignano (Nottingham University): Can migrant preferences shape local politics? Evidence from Argentina. Chair: Sara Lazzaroni (University of Bologna)
  • May 8. Cyril Thomson (University of Bologna): Friends or Rivals? Social Capital and Upward Mobility in Colonial Schools.
     Chair: Gregory Clark (Southern Denmark University)
  • May 15. Gabriel Brown (Stellenbosch University): The Persistent Effects of Bible Translations in Africa. Chair: Felix Meier zu Selhausen (Utrecht University)
  • May 22. Aristeidis Grivokostopoulos (LSE): Two Paths to Gold: Political Polarization and Greece’s Attempts at the Classical Gold Standard. Chair: Ali Coşkun Tunçer (UCL)
  • May 29. Onur Yurkcu (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid): Greek trade coalition in post-Ottoman Istanbul. Chair: Gunes Gokman (Lund University)The YSI-EHES Graduate Webinar in Economic History is a collaborative project between Maxence Castiello, Ana Catelén, Viktor Malein, and Carla Salvo with support from the Institute for New Economic Thinking and the European Historical Economics Society.

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