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Jacob Weisdorf
Jacob Weisdorf
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Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
From foraging to farming: explaining the Neolithic Revolution
JL Weisdorf
Journal of Economic surveys 19 (4), 561-586, 2005
4032005
The wages of women in England, 1260–1850
J Humphries, J Weisdorf
Journal of Economic History 75 (2), 405-447, 2015
2492015
Unreal wages? Real income and economic growth in England, 1260–1850
J Humphries, J Weisdorf
Economic Journal 129 (623), 2867-2887, 2019
236*2019
Population, food, and knowledge: a simple unified growth theory
H Strulik, J Weisdorf
Journal of Economic growth 13, 195-216, 2008
2302008
Was there an ‘industrious revolution’before the industrial revolution? An empirical exercise for England, c. 1300–1830
RC Allen, JL Weisdorf
Economic History Review 64 (3), 715-729, 2011
2122011
Fecundity, fertility and the formation of human capital
M Klemp, J Weisdorf
Economic Journal 129 (618), 925-960, 2019
149*2019
Human capital formation during the first industrial revolution: evidence from the use of steam engines
A De Pleijt, A Nuvolari, J Weisdorf
Journal of the European Economic Association 18 (2), 829-889, 2020
1212020
Survival of the richest? Social status, fertility and social mobility in England 1541-1824
N Boberg-Fazlic, P Sharp, J Weisdorf
European Review of Economic History 15 (3), 365-392, 2011
932011
Pioneering into the past: regional literacy developments in Italy before Italy
C Ciccarelli, J Weisdorf
European Review of Economic History 23 (3), 329-364, 2019
842019
Malthus in the bedroom: Birth spacing as birth control in pre-transition England
F Cinnirella, M Klemp, J Weisdorf
Demography 54 (2), 413-436, 2017
83*2017
Globalization revisited: Market integration and the wheat trade between North America and Britain from the eighteenth century
P Sharp, J Weisdorf
Explorations in Economic History 50 (1), 88-98, 2013
722013
From stagnation to growth: Revisiting three historical regimes
JL Weisdorf
Journal of Population Economics 17, 455-472, 2004
702004
Human capital formation from occupations: the ‘deskilling hypothesis’ revisited
AM De Pleijt, JL Weisdorf
Cliometrica 11, 1-30, 2017
682017
Citation success: Evidence from economic history journal publications
G Di Vaio, D Waldenström, J Weisdorf
Explorations in Economic History 49 (1), 92-104, 2012
592012
Social mobility among Christian Africans: evidence from Anglican marriage registers in Uganda, 1895–2011
F Meier zu Selhausen, MHD Van Leeuwen, JL Weisdorf
Economic History Review 71 (4), 1291-1321, 2018
582018
A colonial legacy of African gender inequality? Evidence from Christian Kampala, 1895–2011
F Meier zu Selhausen, J Weisdorf
Economic History Review 69 (1), 229-257, 2016
582016
Childlessness, celibacy and net fertility in pre-industrial England: the middle-class evolutionary advantage
D De la Croix, EB Schneider, J Weisdorf
Journal of Economic Growth 24, 223-256, 2019
54*2019
How child costs and survival shaped the industrial revolution and the demographic transition
H Strulik, J Weisdorf
Macroeconomic Dynamics 18 (1), 114-144, 2014
512014
Ranking economic history journals: a citation-based impact-adjusted analysis
G Di Vaio, JL Weisdorf
Cliometrica 4, 1-17, 2010
492010
Italy and the little divergence in wages and prices: new data, new results
M Rota, J Weisdorf
Journal of Economic History, 2020
462020
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