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  1. Nov 21, 2019 · SCOTT C. MILLER is Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Economic and Business History at the Yale School of Management's International Center for Finance. Bibliography Ahamed, Liaquat , Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World , 2009 , New York : Penguin Press.

    • Robert F. Bruner, Scott C. Miller
    • 2019
  2. Jan 2, 2010 · The Brenner debate revisited. One of the defining controversies in the field of economic history in the past 35 years is the Brenner debate. Robert Brenner published "Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe" in Past and Present in 1976 (link) and "The Agrarian Roots of European Capitalism" in 1982.

  3. Nov 3, 2017 · Now, more than ever, the study of US foreign policy and security is vital. To that end, we looked back at a specific moment in history—a time when the possibility of World War III seemed imminent—that has become a foundational case study in US foreign policy and security crisis management for the past 55 years: the Cuban Missile Crisis.

  4. Jan 1, 1999 · Abstract Robert Brenner's recent monograph on the economics of global turbulence has renewed interest in one of the most important topics in Marxian thought, the theory of crisis tendencies in capitalism. In their introduction to Brenner's monograph, the editors of New Left Review praise him as a worthy successor to Marx in the strongest possible terms. In the eyes of a number of critics ...

  5. Robert Brenner's recent monograph on the economics of global turbulence has renewed interest in one of the most important topics in Marxian thought, the theory of crisis tendencies in capitalism. In their introduction to Brenner's monograph,

  6. Aug 20, 2020 · In his new book, Break It Up: Secession, Division and the Secret History of America's Imperfect Union, Richard Kreitner explores the history of secession movements in the United States — which ...

  7. Abstract Marx’s chapters on “primitive accumulation” identify two putative sites of capitalism’s emergence: sixteenth-century expropriation of English peasants and Dutch-led commercial exploitation of the wider world. This article follows up both suggestions. It examines Robert Brenner’s influential attribution of capitalism’s origin to class struggles in the English countryside ...