Home arrow Panel 62: Historical Roots of Poverty and Well-Bei
ECAS 2009
3rd European Conference on African Studies
Leipzig, 4 to 7 June 2009
The conference is organised by the European network AEGIS and supported by the Ministry of Science and the Fine Arts (State of Saxony), the University of Leipzig, the European Network in Universal and Global History, and the Small Enterprise Promotion and Training Program.

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Panel 62: Historical Roots of Poverty and Well-Being in African Countries (Morten Jerven)

Panel Organiser: Morten Jerven

This panel responds to the recent efforts of tracing the historical roots of current divergence of incomes and occurrences of poverty in the world. It has been argued that the fundamental cause of current income levels is the lack of pro-growth institutions which originated under the colonial system. This session welcomes new research that suggests new evidence and methods to explain long term economic and social change in African countries.

 

Accepted Abstracts

Order by : Name | Date | Hits [ Descendent ]
Institutions, policies and living standards in Ghana, 1870-1970: Lessons from spatial and temporal patterns in body stature
Abstract for paper to be submitted to Panel 62, Historical Roots of Poverty and Well-Being in African Countries (Morten Jerven)
Raising Revenue in the British Empire, 1870-1940; How 'extractive' were colonial taxes?
Explaining the economic success South Asians in East Africa, 1880-1940. Beyond Economy and Sociology and a quest for Business History
Decolonisation and Long-run Economic Performance: Latin America and Africa
Colonial Origins of Government Corruption? Tax Collection in Kenya and Northern Rhodesia, 1900-38
Cotton Growing and Textile Production in Northern Nigeria from Caliphate to Protectorate c. 1804-1914': A Preliminary Examination
Mapping precolonial African agricultural systems
Colonial Copper and Post-Colonial Diamonds: 20th Century Boom and Bust in Zambia and Botswana Compared
Culture and Poverty among the Igbo of Southeast Nigeria
Gauging Growth through a 'Business Community' – The Lebanese in Ghana and Implications for the Development of Pro-Growth Institutions, c.1925-2000
Africa-Europe Group for Interdisciplinary Studies  ENIUGH  Sächisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst  SEPT  Hanns Seidel Stiftung
Universität Leipzig  Lufthansa  Heinrich Böll Stiftung
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung   Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit   Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

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