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  • Nuevo
  • Libro
    Digital
Busy Tenants

Busy Tenants

USD $ 102,00

Pre-modern commercialisation and a long-term decrease in transaction costs are not only mirrored in the expansion of goods markets but notably in the development of factor markets. Medieval markets for rural land and credit have been addressed systematically with a focus on Western Europe, but to a far lesser extent for Central European regions. The contributions in this volume examine tenure and circulation of rural properties in Central Europe with a focus on the 15th and 16th centuries, combining an in-depth analysis of selected case studies north and south of the Alps and a discussion within the broader picture of the research on pre-modern land markets. The comparison between four Austrian, one Czech, one South-Tyrolian and one Italian case study aims to determine the elements which prove relevant, decisive, or obstructive to the tenant's agency and the development of flexible land markets. The case studies address different methodological issues and specific regional features and in summary, reveal active rural land markets in Central Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries. The mobility of rural properties thrived in an institutional framework that in economic history research has mostly been associated with stability and a lack of dynamism.

Pre-modern commercialisation and a long-term decrease in transaction costs are not only mirrored in the expansion of goods markets but notably in the development of factor markets. Medieval markets for rural land and credit have been addressed systematically with a focus on Western Europe, but to a far lesser extent for Central European regions. The contributions in this volume examine tenure and circulation of rural properties in Central Europe with a focus on the 15th and 16th centuries, combining an in-depth analysis of selected case studies north and south of the Alps and a discussion within the broader picture of the research on pre-modern land markets. The comparison between four Austrian, one Czech, one South-Tyrolian and one Italian case study aims to determine the elements which prove relevant, decisive, or obstructive to the tenant's agency and the development of flexible land markets. The case studies address different methodological issues and specific regional features and in summary, reveal active rural land markets in Central Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries. The mobility of rural properties thrived in an institutional framework that in economic history research has mostly been associated with stability and a lack of dynamism.
  • Isbn
    9783515130233
  • Peso
    13.2 MB
  • Número de páginas
    259
  • Idioma
    Inglés
  • Formato
    PDF
  • Protección
    DRM
  • Referencia
    BKW169516

Thomas Frank

Editor

Thomas Frank es autor de The Conquest of Cool (1998) sobre la reapropiación capitalista de la contracultura juvenil y One Market Under God (2000), que disecciona la Nueva Economía y la idea del "capitalismo popular”. Su último libro se titula The Wrecking Crew (2008) y describe el saqueo de lo público bajo la administración Bush. Fundador del periódico satírico-político The Baffler en 1988, escribe regularmente en la revista Harper's, en The Wall Street Journal y en The New York Times. Ha publicado en castellano en Le Monde Diplomatique, Archipiélago y El Viejo Topo. Sus intervenciones pueden seguirse a través de su página web: http://tcfrank.com/. Vive en Washington, D.C.