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1Die Geschichte der DZ Bank: das genossenschaftliche Zentralbankwesen vom 19. Jahrhundert bis heute
1by Timothy W. Guinnane Claus Sprick Patrick Bormann Joachim Scholtyseck Harald Wixforth Stephan Paul Theresia Theurl“...Die DZ BANK ist das Spitzeninstitut der Volksbanken und Raiffeisenbanken in Deutschland und zählt zu den wichtigsten Kreditinstituten des Landes. Ihre...”
2013
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2by Timothy W. Guinnane Published in Journal of economic literature (01.09.2011)“...The historical fertility transition is the process by which much of Europe and North America went from high to low fertility in the nineteenth and early...”
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3by Guinnane, Timothy W“...In the years between the Great Famine of the 1840s and the First World War, Ireland experienced a drastic drop in population: the percentage of adults who...”
[2015]
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4“...Germany introduced compulsory industrial accident insurance in 1884. The accident-insurance system compensated injured workers and survivors for losses, but...”
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5“...Institutions that rely on joint liability to facilitate lending to the poor have a long history and are now a common feature of many developing countries...”
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6“...The Knappschaft was a mutual association through which German miners insured themselves against accident, illness, and old age. The Knappschaft underlies...”
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7by Guinnane, Timothy W Published in Central European history (01.06.2012)“...Germany's cooperative movement grew and thrived from its inception in the late 1840s to World War I and beyond. Cooperatives were divided along several lines,...”
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8by Guinnane, Timothy W Published in Journal of economic literature (01.03.2002)“...Banks play a greater role in the German financial system than in those of the United States or Britain. Germany's large universal banks are admired by those...”
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9“...Simon Szreter's book Fertility, class and gender in Britain, 1860—1940 argues that social and economic class fails to explain the cross-sectional differences...”
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10by Anderson, Elisabeth Carruthers, Bruce G Guinnane, Timothy W Published in Social science history (20150000)“...Despite the recently demonstrated importance of consumer credit for the economic health of nations and families, little is known about the history of consumer...”
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11by Guinnane, Timothy W Published in The Journal of Economic History (01.06.2001)“...Credit cooperatives were widespread in nineteenth-century Germany, which is surprising given that country's highly developed banking system. One general...”
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12by Bodenhorn, Howard Guinnane, Timothy W Mroz, Thomas A Published in The Journal of economic history (01.03.2017)“...Understanding long-term changes in human well-being is central to understanding the consequences of economic development. An extensive anthropometric...”
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13“...The decline of human fertility that occurred in Europe and North America in the nineteenth century, and elsewhere in the twentieth, remains a topic of debate...”
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14“...Simon Szreter's recent article replies to an earlier article we published in this journal, showing that central statistical results in his book Fertility,...”
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15“...During most of the nineteenth century, Bavaria was notorious for infant mortality rates that were among the highest in Europe. After 1870, infant mortality in...”
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16by Guinnane, Timothy W Harris, Ron Lamoreaux, Naomi R Published in Business history review (20170000)“...British general incorporation law granted companies an extraordinary degree of contractual freedom. It provided companies with a default set of articles of...”
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17A “Friend and Advisor”: External Auditing and Confidence in Germany's Credit Cooperatives, 1889–1914by Guinnane, Timothy W Published in Business history review (20030000)“...An economic enterprise faces two, related, problems: effectively managing its activities and communicating to outsiders that it is, in fact, well run. The...”
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18“...Much empirical social-science research, including work in economic and demographic history, has relied on the analysis of published infrmation on...”
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19by Guinnane, Timothy W“...In the years between the Great Famine of the 1840s and the First World War, Ireland experienced a drastic drop in population: the percentage of adults who...”
1997
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