DATAREV investigates the diffusion of farm accountancy offices of continental Europe.
This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC)
A new PraeDoc position is open @ ERC_Research Datarev Project! If you are interested in investigating the connections between accounting practices and innovations in 19th/20th century Europe, please see under: https://t.co/tHEsK00fyK
📕Very excited to share that our collective volume
Time and Material Culture:
Rethinking Soviet Temporalities
Edited with Antony Kalashnikov and Federica Rossi
Will be published very soon with @routledgebooks!
Thank you to all our contributors!
👉https://t.co/5GyTp47iqX
Marina's presentation was really impressive. for a number of European countries (including, Switzerland, Denmark, Finland), she offered estimates of productivity losses in agriculture as a consequence of the great depression. special thx to @k_wandschneider for organizing it!
This week's colloquium at our department featured a compelling presentation by Marina Chuchko on farm productivity during the Great Depression. Using farm accounting data from 11 countries, her study deepens insights on the recession-productivity nexus. #WiSo#EconHist🧾
This week's colloquium at our department featured a compelling presentation by Marina Chuchko on farm productivity during the Great Depression. Using farm accounting data from 11 countries, her study deepens insights on the recession-productivity nexus. #WiSo#EconHist🧾
📚 Reflecting on insightful discussions from our recent reading group! In the last session of the semester we explored Eve Chiapello's work unraveling the connection between accounting and the concept of capitalism. 🧠💬 #EconHist#capitalism#WiSo
Erich Landsteiner, langjähriger Herausgeber der @OeZG_Journal, spricht im neuen History Podcast des @orf über Ernährung in früheren Jahrhunderten. Bisher sind 4 Folgen erschienen: https://t.co/2OW0AtmWx6
This is a very problematic sentence and seems to encourage lousy standards of historical research. History should not read like a novel. History can be made of tables, figures, lists... Universities should make our priorities as history writers clear: rem tene verba sequentur
"Writing history that reads like a novel is good history," said @maddow. "It can reach and move millions and make them better people."
More about Maddow's @WeinbergCollege visit 🔗 https://t.co/iYUMXy2yfZ
Yesterday's Datarev reading group tackled 'Science in Policy-Making Neutral Experts or Strategic Policy-Makers?' by Ingold & Gschwend. A lively debate on scientists' roles in policy and the Advocacy Coalition Framework! #scienceinpolicy