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EHR leaflet 2010_Layout 1 27/10/2010 16:18 Page 1
JOIN THE ECONOMIC HISTORY SOCIETY
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Annual subscription £21 • Student Membership £10.50
THE ECONOMIC
HISTORY REVIEW
Social Sciences and Humanities
Journals Marketing
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing
9600 Garsington Road
Oxford
OX4 2DQ, UK
Isabel Barratt
A journal of economic and social history
The Economic History
Society exists to support
research and teaching in
economic and social
history. It does this
through publications,
including The Economic
History Review and a
range of textbooks and
study packs, through
conferences and
workshops, through the
finance of research
fellowships and research
grants, and through
bursaries and prizes for
younger scholars.
Impact
Factor
0.885
The Economic History
Review is an invaluable
source of information
and is available free to
members of the Economic
History Society. Publishing
reviews of books,
periodicals and
information technology,
The Review will keep
anyone interested in
economic and social
history abreast of current
developments in the
subject. It aims at broad
coverage of themes of
economic and social
change, including the
intellectual, political and
cultural implications of
these changes.
ISI Journal Citation Reports© Ranking: 2009: 2/22
(History of Social Sciences); 103/245 (Economics)
wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/ehr
EHR leaflet 2010_Layout 1 27/10/2010 16:18 Page 4
JOIN THE ECONOMIC HISTORY SOCIETY
Activities of the Society and Membership Benefits include:
Visit the Publications Section of the Economic History
Society Website for access to:
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Economic History Society
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The annual conference
The dissemination of wide ranging information and electronic publications via
the Society Website
Doctoral and post doctoral fellowships
Postgraduate training opportunities
Access to small grants for workshops, meetings and projects
The annual women’s committee workshop
Commissioning of publications
Financial and other assistance with first monograph publication
Provision of conferences, workshops and study materials for schools and colleges
Lobbying activities on behalf of the subject with HEFCE, SHEFC, individual
universities and other bodies
Liaison with ESRC, AHRC, ALSISS, History UK (HE) and other grant giving and
representational bodies
A whole range of new web based services to assist with teaching and research
The Electronic Review
Significant discounts on book purchases with Blackwell, Polity Press and
other publishers
Three new prizes in economic and/or social history; the First Monograph Prize,
PhD Dissertation Prize and Teaching Prize.
For further information, please visit www.ehs.org.uk
Alternatively contact:
Mrs Maureen Galbraith, School of Social and Political Sciences,
University of Glasgow, Lilybank House, Bute Gardens, Glasgow, G12 8RT.
Email: ehsocsec@arts.gla.ac.uk • Tel: 0141 330 4662
T.S. Ashton Prize - Young Researchers!
The T.S. Ashton Prize, established with funds donated by the late Professor T.S. Ashton
(1889-1968), will be awarded, biennially, to the author of the best article accepted for
publication in the Economic History Review in the previous two calendar years, who
satisfies one of the following conditions at time of submission:
•
The author is within five years of receipt of her/his PhD
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The author normally has no previous publication in the field of economic and/or
social history, or a closely related field.
Why not submit your article?
For further information visit:
http://www.ehs.org.uk/ehs/GrantsAwardsPrizes/TSAshtonPrize.asp
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The Economic History Review Cumulative Index to 1997
The Economic History Review Annual List of Publications on the Economic
and Social History of Great Britain and Ireland
The Annual Review of Periodical Literature
The Full Text of ‘A review of The Economic History Review in the last 50
Years’, by Professor Sir E.A. Wrigley
Electronic access to back numbers of The Economic History Review can be gained
(by subscribers) via JSTOR (www.jstor.org) to 1927 and abstracts of articles in more
recent issues are available via: wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/ehr
Links to these can be found on the Economic History Society website:
www.ehs.org.uk
The Economic History Review
A journal of economic and social history
Edited by Steve Hindle and Stephen Broadberry
The Economic History Review is an invaluable source of
information and is available free to members of the Economic
History Society. Publishing reviews of books, periodicals and
information technology, The Review will keep anyone
interested in economic and social history abreast of current
developments in the subject. It aims at broad coverage of
themes of economic and social change, including the
intellectual, political and cultural implications of these changes.
Many issues contain an essay under the heading Surveys and
Speculations which discusses a particular problem in economic and
social history in an adventurous way. The extensive book review
section in each issue provides a guide to the latest literature on
economic and social history in the British Isles and throughout the rest of
the world.
Each volume also contains Essays in Bibliography and Criticism which are designed to
bring readers up to date with the latest writings on a particular country and topical
themes in economic and social history.
wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/ehr
Sample articles
• Girl power: the European marriage pattern and labour markets in the North Sea
region in the late medieval and early modern period
Tine De Moor; Jan Luiten Van Zanden
• Nature as historical protagonist: environment and society in pre-industrial England
Bruce M. S. Campbell
• Lancashire, India, and shifting competitive advantage in cotton textiles, 1700–1850:
the neglected role of factor prices
Stephen Broadberry; Bishnupriya Gupta
Against the mainstream: Nazi privatization in 1930s Germany
Germá Bel
• Profitability trends in Hollywood, 1929 to 1999: somebody must know something
Michael Pokorny; John Sedgwick
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You will be given the option to opt out of these additional Emails at any
time without affecting your e-toc alerts.
What are e-toc alerts?
E-tocs are electronic table of contents sent to you via Email
each time an issue of a journal is published online. At a
glance, you can be up-to-date with the latest research and
articles from your favourite journals – without having to
move from your desk. Great for research, e-tocs are
convenient and free.
Sign up for membership online, by visiting www.ehs.org.uk
or wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/ehr and clicking on
Membership Information in the left hand menu.
Please complete one of the following sections:
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The EHS wishes to use a database of the Society’s membership that
includes names plus postal and Email addresses, to regularly inform
its members about activities and benefits of Society membership.
This information will be shared between the EHS executive
committee and council and its publishers.
It is important that you complete these sections in order to fully
benefit from the range of services for members, including
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Please send completed applications by post to:
Isabel Barratt Social Sciences and Humanities,
Journals Marketing, Wiley-Blackwell Publishing,
9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, UK.
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