Australian Economic History Review

Papers
(The TQCC of Australian Economic History Review is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-11-01 to 2025-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
Made In Chinatown: Chinese Australian Furniture Factories, 1880–1930, PeterGibsonSydney University Press, 2022, xxvii +198, pp, 9 B&W illlus., ISBN 978174332785229
Issue Information4
Issue Information3
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3
The Siamese rice trade during the interwar years: Trade pattern, crisis and business survival2
1
The gypsy economist. The life and times of Colin Clark. AlexMillmowSingapore: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021, vii + 396 pp., ISBN 978‐981‐33‐6945‐00
Determining the reasons for the failure of British aircraft manufacturers to invest in Australia's industry, 1934–19410
Revisiting the tariff‐growth correlation: The Australasian colonies, 1866–19000
0
‘Australian sailors wanted’: Labour supply and Australian shipping, c. 1870–c. 19140
The legacy of colonial rule: On the impact of the railway zones in modern China0
Export development in New Zealand: Kiwifruit and seafood 1975–19850
Issue Information0
Above board? Interlocking directorates and corporate contagion in 1980s Australia0
Malthus and gender0
Volume Contents0
0
Understanding the effects of social networks on banking development: Essays on modern Chinese Bank Networks during the republican era0
A Fabian paradise or a one‐man show? How the interwar Queensland economy seduced two prominent English economists0
Their fiery cross of union: a retelling of the creation of the Australian Federation, 1889–1914. William OliverColeman, Redland Bay: Connor Court Publishing, 20210
Volume Contents0
Report of the Editor for 2021 and Announcements of the President0
Forced displacement in history: Some recent research0
Institutional dynamics and access to non‐farm employment in rural China, 1950–19960
Rich Europe, poor Asia: How wealth inequality, demography, and crop risks explain the poverty of pre‐industrial East Asia, 1300–18000
The occupational structure of late Imperial China, 1734–1898: A dissertation summary0
0.017630815505981