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Business history

Business history is a historiographical field which examines the history of firms, business methods, government regulation and the effects of business on society. It also includes biographies of individual firms, executives, and entrepreneurs. It is related to economic history.[1] It is distinct from "company history" which refers to official histories, usually funded by the company itself.

United States

Robber baron debate

Even before academic studies began, Americans were enthralled by the Robber baron debate.[2][3][4]

As the United States industrialized very rapidly after the Civil War, a few hundred prominent men made large fortunes by building and controlling major industries, such as railroads, shipping, steel, mining and banking. Yet the newer who gathered the most attention was railroader Cornelius Vanderbilt. Historian Stephen Frazier argues that probably most Americans admired Vanderbilt; they agreed with biographer William Augustus Croffut who wrote in 1886:

It is now known that the desire to own property is the chief difference between the Savage and the enlightened man; that aggregations of money in the hands of individuals are in inestimable blessing to Society, for without them there could be no public improvements or private enterprises, no railroads or steamships, or telegraphs; no cities, the leisure class, no schools, colleges, literature, art – in short, no civilization. The one man to whom the community owes most is the capitalist, that the menu gives, but the man who saves and invests, so that his property reproduces and multiplies itself instead of being consumed.[5]

However, Fraser goes on, there was a minority who vehemently dissented:

A minority were irate and excoriated the titans of finance and industry as 'robber barons' and worse. E.L. Godkin, founder of The Nation, launched a volley of invective at the new plutocracy: 'kings of the street' like Vanderbilt displayed 'unmitigated and immitigable selfishness' as appalling as their 'audacity, push, unscrupulousness and brazen disregard of others' rights'.[6]

By the Great Depression of the 1930s, Fraser continues:

Biographies of Mellon, Carnegie and Rockefeller were often laced with moral censure, warning that 'tories of industry' were a threat to democracy and that parasitism, aristocratic pretension and tyranny have always trailed in the wake of concentrated wealth, whether accumulated dynastically or more impersonally by the faceless corporation. This scholarship, and the cultural persuasion of which it was an expression, drew on a deeply rooted sensibility–partly religious, partly egalitarian and democratic–that stretched back to William Jennings Bryan, Andrew Jackson and Tom Paine.[7]

However a counterattack by academic historians began as the Depression ended. Business historian Allan Nevins challenged this view of big businessmen by advocating the "Industrial Statesman" thesis. Nevins, in his John D. Rockefeller: The Heroic Age of American Enterprise (2 vols., 1940), took on Josephson. He argued that while Rockefeller may have engaged in some unethical and illegal business practices, this should not overshadow his bringing order to industrial chaos of the day. Gilded Age capitalists, according to Nevins, sought to impose order and stability on competitive business, and that their work made the United States the foremost economy by the 20th century.[8] Business journalist Ferdinand Lundberg later criticized Nevins for confusing readers.[9] By contrast, historian Priscilla Roberts argues that Nevins' studies of inventors and businessmen brought about a reassessment of American industrialization and its leaders. She writes:

Nevins argued that economic development in the United States caused relatively little human suffering, while raising the general standard of living and making the United States the great industrial power capable of defeating Germany in both world wars. The great capitalists of that period should, he argued, be viewed, not as 'robber barons', but as men whose economic self-interest had played an essentially positive role in American history, and who had done nothing criminal by the standards of their time.[10]

Historians have followed Nevins' lead in writing biographies of the major industrialists of the Gilded Age. These include:

Though these later biographers did not confer heroic status on their subjects, they used historical and biographical investigations to establish a more complex understanding of the American past, and the history of American economic development in particular.

In 1958 historian Hal Bridges finds that "The most vehement and persistent controversy in business history has been that waged by the critics and defenders of the 'robber baron' concept of the American businessman."[11] In terms of the Robber Baron model, by the end of the 20th-century scholars had mostly discarded it although it remained influential in the popular culture. Richard White, historian of the transcontinental railroads, stated in 2011 he has no use for the concept because it had been killed off by historians Robert H. Wiebe and Alfred Chandler. He notes that "Much of the modern history of corporations is a reaction against the Robber Barons and fictions."[12]

Academic studies

Meanwhile, business history as an academic discipline was founded by Professor N. S. B. Gras at the Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration, starting in 1927. He defined the field's subject matter and approach, wrote the first general treatise in the field, and helped Harvard build a tradition of scholarship as well as the leading library in the field. He edited a series of monographs, the Harvard Studies in Business History. He also served as editor of the Bulletin of the Business Historical Society (1926–1953), a journal which later became the Business History Review (1954-date). N.S.B. Grass and Henrietta M. Larson, Casebook in American business history (1939) defined the field for a generation.[13]

Business history in the U.S. took off in the 1960s with a high volume of products and innovative methodologies. Scholars worked to develop theoretical explanations of the growth of the business enterprise, the study of strategy and structure by Alfred Chandler being a prime example. The relationship between business and the federal government became a focal point of the study. On the whole, the 1960s affirmed the conclusions of the earlier decades regarding the close interrelationship between government and business enterprise.[14]

Ranking entrepreneurs and management theorists

A 2002 survey of 58 business history professors gave the top spot in the history of American business entrepreneurs to Henry Ford, followed by Bill Gates; John D. Rockefeller; Andrew Carnegie, and Thomas Edison. Also included were Sam Walton; J. P. Morgan; Alfred P. Sloan; Walt Disney; Ray Kroc; Thomas J. Watson; Alexander Graham Bell; Eli Whitney; James J. Hill; Jack Welch; Cyrus McCormick; David Packard; Bill Hewlett; Cornelius Vanderbilt; and George Westinghouse.[15]

A 1977 survey of management scholars reported the top five pioneers in management ideas were: Frederick Winslow Taylor; Chester Barnard; Frank Bunker Gilbreth; Elton Mayo; and Lillian Moller Gilbreth.[16] An emphasis on expertise can be seen as defining an era of management work, shown in the works of Elton Mayo, Chester Barnard, Mary Parker Follett, Max Weber, Chris Argyris, and Peter Drucker. Drucker introduced the term "knowledge work" in 1959[17] and has been described as "the founder of modern management".[18]

Chandler

After 1960 the most influential scholar was Alfred D. Chandler Jr. (1918-2007) at the Harvard Business School. In a career that spanned over sixty years, Chandler produced numerous groundbreaking monographs, articles, and reviews. Intensely focused on only a few areas of the discipline, Chandler nonetheless succeeded in establishing and developing an entirely new realm of business history.[19][20][21]

Chandler's masterwork was The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (1977). His first two chapters looked at traditional owner-operated small business operations in commerce and production, including the largest among them, the slave plantations in the South. Chapters 3-5 summarize the history of railroad management, with stress on innovations not just in technology but also in accounting, finance and statistics. He then turned to the new business operations made possible by the rail system in mass distribution, such as jobbers, department stores and mail order. A quick survey (ch 8) review mass innovation in mass production. The integration of mass distribution and mass production (ch 9-11) led to many mergers and the emergence of giant industrial corporations by 1900. Management for Chandler was much more than the CEO, it was the whole system of techniques and included middle management (ch 11) as well as the corporate structure of the biggest firms, Standard Oil, General Electric, US Steel, and DuPont (ch 13–14). Chandler argued that modern large-scale firms arose to take advantage of the national markets and productive techniques available after the rail network was in place. He found that they prospered because they had higher productivity, lower costs, and higher profits. The firms created the "managerial class" in America because they needed to coordinate the increasingly complex and interdependent system. This ability to achieve efficiency through coordination, not some anti-competitive monopolistic greed by robber barons, explained the high levels of concentration in modern American industry.[22]

Chandler's work was somewhat ignored in history departments, but proved influential in business, economics, and sociology departments.[23] In sociology, for example, prior to Chandler's research, sociologists assumed there were no differences between governmental, corporate, and nonprofit organizations. Chandler's focus on corporations clearly demonstrated that there were differences, and this thesis has guided organizational sociologists' work since the 1970s. It also motivated sociologists to investigate and critique Chandler's work more closely, turning up instances in which Chandler assumed American corporations acted for reasons of efficiency when they actually operated in a context of politics or conflict.[24] Other historians, such as Gabriel Kolko, challenged the very notion of "efficiency through coordination", arguing instead that big business had, for reasons of inefficiency and a dislike of market discipline, openly sought government assistance to keep market forces at bay.

Other mechanisms

Lamoreaux et al. (2003) offers a new synthesis of American business history during the 19th-20th centuries. Moving beyond the markets-versus-hierarchies framework that underlies the previously dominant interpretation of Chandler, the authors highlight the great variety of coordination mechanisms in use in the economy at any given time. Drawing on late-20th-century theoretical work in economics, they show how the relative advantages and disadvantages of these different mechanisms have shifted in complex and often unpredictable ways as a result of changing economic circumstances. One advantage of this perspective is that it avoids the teleology that has characterized so much writing in the field. As a result, the authors can situate the "New Economy" of the late 20th century in broad historical context without succumbing to the temptation to view it as a climactic stage in the process of economic development. They thus provide a particularly persuasive example of the importance of business history to the understanding of national and international history.[25]

A number of sources address the history of business management as it has developed as a profession. From Higher Aims to Hired Hands: The Social Transformation of American Business Schools and the Unfulfilled Promise of Management as a Profession (2007) by Rakesh Khurana traces the rise and development of American management as a profession and argues that its promise has been unfulfilled. A key event was the publication of the Gordon-Howell report, Higher Education for Business (1959), by economists Robert Aaron Gordon and James Edwin Howell. Funded by the Ford Foundation, the report gave detailed recommendations for treating management as a science and improving the academic quality of business schools.[26][27][28][29][30] Another influential report, that same year, was The Education Of American Businessmen: A Study Of University-College Programs In Business Administration (1959) by Frank Cook Pierson.[31] The next thirty years are sometimes referred to as a “Golden Age” in which quantitative social science research became an established part of business schools.[32][26] By the 1990s, however, there was a gap between theory-oriented business school faculty and the more applied interests of students and business practitioners. In 1993, Donald C. Hambrick's presidential address to the Academy of Management (AoM). “What if the Academy Actually Mattered?”, drew attention to this relevance crisis. The theme has been repeatedly visited since then, including by president Anita M. McGahan in 2017.[26][27][33][34] Another major focus of concern has been the replication crisis. Anne S. Tsui has suggested that business and management should not treat the issues of rigor (credibility of evidence) and relevance (usefulness of knowledge) separately, but see them as related.[35]

Comparative

Understanding the development of business history as a discipline meriting its own aims, theories and methods is often understood as a transition from dominating themes of 'company biography', toward more analytical 'comparative' approaches. This 'comparative' trend enabled practitioners to underline their work with 'generalist' potential. Questions of comparative business performance have become a staple, featuring into the wider economic histories of nations, regions, and communities. For many, this transition was first achieved by Alfred D. Chandler. Chandler's successors as Isidor Straus Professor of Business History at Harvard Business School continued to emphasize the importance of comparative research and course development. In 1995 Thomas K. McCraw published Creating Modern Capitalism (Cambridge, MA 1995) [36] This book compared the business histories of Britain, Germany, Japan, and the United States since the Industrial Revolution, and was used as the text of a new year MBA course at Harvard Business School. Geoffrey Jones, who was McCraw's successor as Isidor Straus Professor of Business History, also pursued a comparative research agenda. He published a comparative study of the history of globalization called Multinationals and Global Capitalism (Oxford, 2005).[37] In 2010, Jones also published a comparative history of the global beauty industry entitled Beauty Imagined: A History of the Global Beauty Industry (Oxford, 2010).[38] More recently, Jones and the Business History Initiative at the Harvard Business School has sought to facilitate research and teaching on African, Asian and Latin American business history in a project called Creating Emerging Markets, which includes interviews with long-time leaders of firms and NGOs in those regions.[39][40][41]

A trend in recent years has been to compare the business histories of individual countries. Geoffrey Jones (academic) and Andrea Lluch have published a comparative study of the historical impact of globalization on Argentina and Chile.[42] In 2011 Jones and his co-editor Walter A. Friedman published an editorial in Business History Review which identified comparative research as essential for the future of business history as a discipline.[43] Anne S. Tsui has studied business in both the United States and China and encourages scholars to collaborate internationally and to study leadership as it is practiced in China.[26][44]

France

American historians working in French business history led by Rondo Cameron argued that most of the business enterprises in France were family-owned, small in scale, and managed conservatively.[45] By contrast, French business historians emphasized the success of national economic planning since the end of World War II. They argued that the economic development in this period stemmed from various phenomena of the late 19th century: the corporation system, the joint-stock deposit and investment banks, and the technological innovations in the steel industry. To clarify the contributions of 19th-century entrepreneurs to the economic development in France, French scholars support two journals, Enterprises et Histoire and Revue d'Histoire de la Siderurgie.[46][47]

Latin America

Barbero (2008) examines the development of the field of Latin American business history, from the 1960s to 2007. Latin American business history developed in the 1960s, but until the 1980s it was dominated by either highly politicized debates over Latin American underdevelopment or biographies of Latin American entrepreneurs. Since the 1980s, Latin American business history has become a much more professionalized and an integrated part of Latin American academia. It is much less politicized and has moved beyond entrepreneurial biography to histories of companies and industries. However, Latin American business historians have still not devoted enough attention to agricultural enterprises or comparative histories between the many countries. Probably most importantly, Latin American business historians have to become much more versed in business history theory and methodology so as to get beyond mere summation of the region's economic past.[48][49]

In the 1980s, numerous governments in Latin America adopted neoliberal policies.[50][51] In Mexico, for example, under presidents Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988–94) and Ernesto Zedillo neoliberalism became the basis for state-private sector relationships. The new policy allowed for close cooperation with United States and Canada as exemplified by the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) solidified a strategic alliance between the state and business.[52] In Brazil The key policy was privatization of nationalized industries especially steel through the 'Programa Nacional de Desestatizção' (National Program of Destatization) during the early 1990s. It aimed to implement a new industrial policy by restructuring the industry and reforming labor-business relations.[53][54]

The Common Market of the South, or Mercosur, is a South American commerce pact started in 1991 among Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay at the instigation of Argentina and Brazil.[55] Mercosur's purpose is to promote free trade and the fluid movement of goods, people, and currency. Since its foundation, Mercosur's functions have been updated and amended many times; it currently confines itself to a customs union, in which there is free intra-zone trade and common trade policy between member countries.[56]

Britain

Business History in Britain emerged in the 1950s following the publication of a series of influential company histories and the establishment of the journal Business History[57] in 1958 at the University of Liverpool. The most influential of these early company histories was Charles Wilson (historian)’s History of Unilever, the first volume of which was published in 1954. Other examples included Coleman's work on Courtaulds and artificial fibers, Alford on Wills and the tobacco industry, Barker on Pilkington's and glass manufacture.[58][59] These early studies were conducted primarily by economic historians interested in the role of leading firms in the development of the wider industry and therefore went beyond mere corporate histories. Although some work examined the successful industries of the industrial revolution and the role of the key entrepreneurs, in the 1970s scholarly debate in British business history became increasingly focused on the economic decline. For economic historians, the loss of British competitive advantage after 1870 could at least in part be explained by entrepreneurial failure, prompting further business history research into the individual industry and corporate cases. The Lancashire cotton textile industry, which had been the leading take-off sector in the industrial revolution, but which was slow to invest in subsequent technical developments, became an important topic of debate on this subject. William Lazonick for example argued that cotton textile entrepreneurs in Britain failed to develop larger integrated plants on the American model; a conclusion similar to Chandler's synthesis of a number of comparative case studies.[60][61]

Studies of British business leaders have emphasized how they fit into the class structure, especially their relationship to the aristocracy, and the desire to use their wealth to purchase landed estates, and hereditary titles.[62][63][64] Biography has been of less importance in British business history, but there are compilations.[65] British business history began to widen its scope in the 1980s, with research work conducted at the LSE's Business History Unit, led first by Leslie Hannah, then by Terry Gourvish. Other research centres followed, notably at Glasgow and Reading, reflecting an increasing involvement in the discipline by Business and Management School academics. More recent editors of Business History, Geoffrey Jones (academic) (Harvard Business School), Charles Harvey (University of Newcastle Business School), John Wilson (Liverpool University Management School) and Steven Toms (Leeds University Business School) have promoted management strategy themes such as networks, family capitalism, corporate governance, human resource management, marketing and brands, and multi-national organisations in their international as well as merely British context. Employing these new themes has allowed business historians to challenge and adapt the earlier conclusions of Chandler and others about the performance of the British economy.[66]

Africa

There is a growing body of work of business history in Africa. In one of the recent works Ebimo Amungo chronicled the birth, growth and contributions of indigenous African multinationals to the economic development of Africa with his book "The Rise of the African Multinational Enterprise".[67]

Notes

  1. ^ Claus, Peter; Marriott, John (2012). History: An Introduction to Theory, Method and Practice (2 ed.). London: Taylor & Francis (published 2017). p. 214. ISBN 9781317409878. Retrieved 2018-07-06. Essentially, business history is concerned with how production and the delivery of goods and services was organized in the past; by an individual, a sole trader, a group of individuals, a partnership, or a joint stock limited liability concern - the modern company. It is also concerned with understanding the processes underlying decision making. All this makes business history distinct from economic history, although they are clearly allied [...].
  2. ^ Peter d'A. Jones ed. The Robber Barons Revisited (1968) summarizes the debate and provides excerpts from primary and secondary sources.
  3. ^ Thomas C. Cochran, "The Legend of the Robber Barons." Explorations in Economic History 1#5 (1949) online.
  4. ^ Hal Bridges, "The Robber Baron Concept in American History" Business History Review (1958) 32#1 pp. 1–13 in JSTOR
  5. ^ William Augustus Croffut (1886). The Vanderbilts and the Story of Their Fortune. Belford, Clarke. p. 275.
  6. ^ Steve Fraser, "The Misunderstood Robber Baron: On Cornelius Vanderbilt: T.J. Stiles's The First Tycoon is a gilded portrait of the robber baron Cornelius Vanderbilt", The Nation Nov. 11, 2009
  7. ^ Fraser, "The Misunderstood Robber Baron"
  8. ^ Allan Nevins, John D. Rockefeller: The Heroic Age of American Enterprise (2 vols., 1940).
  9. ^ Ferdinand Lundberg. The Rockefeller Syndrome. New York: Lyle Stuart, 1975. p. 145.
  10. ^ Priscilla M. Roberts, "Nevins, Allan" in Kelly Boyd, ed. (1999). Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, vol. 2. Taylor & Francis. p. 869. ISBN 9781884964336.
  11. ^ Hal Bridges, "The Robber Baron Concept in American History", Business History Review (1958) 32#1 pp. 1–13 in JSTOR
  12. ^ Richard White, Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America (2011) pp. xxxi, 234, 508.
  13. ^ See N.S.B. Grass and Henrietta M. Larson, Casebook in American business history (1939)
  14. ^ Richard R. John, "Elaborations, revisions, dissents: Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.'s, the visible Hand after twenty years." Business History Review 71.2 (1997): 151-200. online
  15. ^ Blaine McCormick, and Burton W. Folsom. "A survey of business historians on America's greatest entrepreneurs." Business History Review 77.4 (2003): 703-716. online
  16. ^ Joyce Thompson Heames, and Jacob W. Breland. "Management pioneer contributors: 30-year review." Journal of Management History 16.4 (2010): 427-436. online.
  17. ^ McGrath, Rita Gunther (30 July 2014). "Management's Three Eras: A Brief History". Harvard Business Review. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  18. ^ Denning, Steve (August 29, 2014). "The Best Of Peter Drucker". Forbes.
  19. ^ Richard R. John, "Elaborations, Revisions, Dissents: Alfred D. Chandler Jr.'s The Visible Hand after Twenty Years," Business History Review (1997) 7#1 pp 151-200 online
  20. ^ Richard R. John, "Turner, Beard, Chandler: Progressive Historians." Business History Review 82.02 (2008): 227-240.
  21. ^ Pamela Walker Laird, "Alfred D. Chandler, Jr. and the Landscape of Marketing History." Journal of Macromarketing 20#2 (2000): 167-173.
  22. ^ Steven W. Usselman, "Still Visible: Alfred D. Chandler's The Visible Hand," Technology and Culture vol 47 #3 (2006) 584-596
  23. ^ Thomas K. McCraw, "Alfred Chandler: His Vision and Achievement," Business History Review, Summer 2008, Vol. 82 Issue 2, pp 207-226
  24. ^ Neil Fligstein, "Chandler and the Sociology of Organizations," Business History Review, Summer 2008, Vol. 82 Issue 2, pp 241-250
  25. ^ Naomi R. Lamoreaux et al, "Beyond Markets and Hierarchies: Toward a New Synthesis of American Business History." American Historical Review 2003 108(2): 404-433.
  26. ^ a b c d Tsui, Anne S. (21 January 2022). "From Traditional Research to Responsible Research: The Necessity of Scientific Freedom and Scientific Responsibility for Better Societies". Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior. 9 (1): 1–32. doi:10.1146/annurev-orgpsych-062021-021303. ISSN 2327-0608. S2CID 244238570. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  27. ^ a b Khurana, Rakesh (2007). From higher aims to hired hands : the social transformation of American business schools and the unfulfilled promise of management as a profession. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 273. ISBN 9780691145877.
  28. ^ McLaren, Patricia Genoe (March 2019). "Stop Blaming Gordon and Howell: Unpacking the Complex History Behind the Research-Based Model of Education". Academy of Management Learning & Education. 18 (1): 43–58. doi:10.5465/amle.2017.0311. S2CID 149571315.
  29. ^ "The more things change..." The Economist. 4 June 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  30. ^ Hutchins, John G. B. (1960). "Review of Higher Education for Business.; The Education of American Business Men: A Study in University-College Programs in Business Administration". Administrative Science Quarterly. 5 (2): 279–295. doi:10.2307/2390781. ISSN 0001-8392. JSTOR 2390781. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  31. ^ Pierson, Frank (1 January 1959). "The Education Of American Businessmen: A Study Of University-College Programs In Business Administration". Books by Alumni. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  32. ^ McKiernan, P.; Tsui, A. S. (2020). "Responsible Research in Business and Management: transforming doctoral education". In Moosmayer, DC; Laasch, O; Parkes, C; Brown, KG (eds.). The Sage Handbook of Responsible Management Learning and Education. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publ. pp. 485–501.
  33. ^ Hambrick, Donald C. (1 January 1994). "What if the Academy Actually Mattered?". Academy of Management Review. 19 (1): 11–16. doi:10.5465/amr.1994.9410122006. ISSN 0363-7425. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  34. ^ McGahan, A. (2018). "2017 Presidential address—Freedom in scholarship: lessons from Atlanta". Acad. Manag. Rev. 43 (2): 173–78. doi:10.5465/amr.2017.0580.
  35. ^ Tsui, Anne S. (1 June 2021). "Responsible Research and Responsible Leadership Studies". Academy of Management Discoveries. 7 (2): 166–170. doi:10.5465/amd.2019.0244. S2CID 211438268. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  36. ^ Thomas K. McCraw (1995). Creating Modern Capitalism. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-17555-7.
  37. ^ Geoffrey Jones (2005). Multinationals and Global Capitalism. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-927210-7.
  38. ^ Geoffrey Jones (2010). Beauty Imagined: A History of the Global Beauty Industry. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199556496.
  39. ^ "Creating Emerging Markets - Creating Emerging Markets - Harvard Business School". Creating Emerging Markets. Harvard Business School.
  40. ^ "Thriving in the Turbulence of Emerging Markets". Working Knowledge: The Thinking That Leads. Harvard Business School. 14 January 2015.
  41. ^ "Building Histories of Emerging Economies One Interview at a Time". Working Knowledge: The Thinking That Leads. Harvard Business School. 28 May 2014.
  42. ^ Geoffrey Jones; Andrea Lluch (2015). The Impact of Globalization on Argentina and Chile. Business Enterprises and Entrepreneurship. Edward Elgar. ISBN 978-1-78347-363-2.
  43. ^ Walter A. Friedman; Geoffrey Jones (2011). "Time for Debate". Business History Review. 85 (3): 1–8. doi:10.1017/S0007680511000201.
  44. ^ Kawamura, Kristine Marin (1 January 2013). "Dr Kristine Marin Kawamura interviews Anne Tsui, PhD". Cross Cultural Management. 20 (2). doi:10.1108/ccm.2013.13620baa.009. ISSN 1352-7606. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  45. ^ Tom Kemp, "French economic performance: some new views critically examined." European History Quarterly 15.4 (1985): 473-488.
  46. ^ Youssef Cassis, "Business History in France" in Franco Amatori and Geoffrey Jones, eds. Business history around the world (Cambridge University Press, 2003) pp. 192-214
  47. ^ François Crouzet, "The historiography of French economic growth in the nineteenth century." Economic History Review 56.2 (2003): 215-242.
  48. ^ María Inés Barbero, "Business History in Latin America: A Historiographical Perspective," Business History Review, (2008) 82#3, pp 555-575
  49. ^ Carlos, Marichal, "Archival Note: Banking History and Archives in Latin America," Business History Review, (2008) 82#3 pp 585-602
  50. ^ Gerardo Otero, "The neoliberal food regime in Latin America: state, agribusiness transnational corporations and biotechnology." Canadian Journal of Development Studies/Revue canadienne d'études du développement 33.3 (2012): 282-294 .
  51. ^ Ben Ross Schneider, "The material bases of technocracy: Investor confidence and neoliberalism in Latin America." in The politics of expertise in Latin America edited by Miguel A. Centeno, and Patricio Silva, (Palgrave Macmillan, 1998) pp. 77-95. Online 2020-05-31 at the Wayback Machine
  52. ^ Remonda Bensabat Kleinberg, "Strategic Alliances: State‐Business Relations in Mexico Under Neo‐Liberalism and Crisis." Bulletin of Latin American Research 18.1 (1999): 71-87.
  53. ^ Ben Ross Schneider, "The developmental state in Brazil: comparative and historical perspectives." Brazilian Journal of Political Economy 35.1 (2015): 114-132.
  54. ^ José Ignácio Vega Fernández, "Neoliberalism and Neo-Developmentalism as Promoters of Capitalist Aquaculture in Brazil." in State Capitalism Under Neoliberalism: The Case of Agriculture and Food in Brazil (2019): 147+.
  55. ^ Gian Luca Gardini, "Who Invented Mercosur?." Diplomacy and Statecraft 18.4 (2007): 805-830.
  56. ^ Laura Gómez-Mera, "Lessons from Latin America: MERCOSUR." in Region-Building in Africa (Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2016). 297-312.
  57. ^ see Business History 2011-04-14 at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ John Wilson, and Steven Toms, J.S ‘Fifty years of Business History’, Business History (2008) 50#2 pp.125-26
  59. ^ . Leslie Hannah, ‘New Issues in British Business History’, Business History Review (1983) 57# 2, pp.165-174.
  60. ^ Chandler, A., Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism, Cambridge Mass.: Belknap Press (1990).
  61. ^ William Mass, & William Lazonick, "The British Cotton Industry and International Competitive Advantage: the state of the debates," Business History, (1990) 32#4 pp. 9-65.
  62. ^ Howard L. Malchow, Gentlemen capitalists: the social and political world of the Victorian businessman (Stanford University Press, 19920.
  63. ^ William D. Rubinstein, "Wealth, elites and the class structure of modern Britain." Past & Present 76 (1977): 99-126.
  64. ^ Julia A. Smith, "Land ownership and social change in late nineteenth-century Britain." Economic History Review 53#.4 (2000): 767-776. in JSTOR
  65. ^ David J. Jeremy, ed., Dictionary of business biography: a biographical dictionary of business leaders active in Britain in the period 1860-1980 (Butterworths, 1984).
  66. ^ Toms, Steven and Wilson, John F. "Scale, Scope and Accountability: Towards a New Paradigm of British Business History," Business History (2003) 45#4 pp 1-23.
  67. ^ Amungo, Ebimo (2020). "The Rise of the African Multinational Enterprise (AMNE)". Management for Professionals. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-33096-5. ISBN 978-3-030-33095-8. ISSN 2192-8096. S2CID 216471932.

Bibliography

Textbooks and surveys: USA

  • Blackford, Mansel G. A History of Small Business in America ISBN 0-8057-9824-2) (1992)
  • Blackford, Mansel G., and K. Austin Kerr. Business Enterprise in American History (ISBN 0395351553) (1990)
  • Blaszczyk, Regina Lee, and Philip B. Scranton, eds. Major Problems in American Business History: Documents and Essays (2006) 521 pp.
  • Bryant, Keith L. A History of American Business (1983) (ISBN 0133892476)
  • Chamberlain, John. Enterprising Americans: A Business History of the United States (ISBN 0060107022) (1974) by popular journalist
  • Chandler, Jr., Alfred D. The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (1977), highly influential study
  • Chandler, Jr., Alfred D. Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the Industrial Enterprise (1962)
  • Chandler, Jr., Alfred D. Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism (1990).
  • Chandler, Jr., Alfred D. "The Competitive Performance of U.S. Industrial Enterprises since the Second World War," Business History Review 68 (Spring 1994): 1–72.
  • Chandler, Alfred D., Jr. and James W. Cortada. A Nation Transformed by Information: How Information Has Shaped the United States from Colonial Times to the Present (2000)
  • Cochran, Thomas Childs. Business in American Life: A History (1976)
  • Dibacco, Thomas V. Made in the U.S.A.: The History of American Business (1988) (ISBN 0060914661)
  • Friedman, Walter A. and Tedlow, Richard S. "Statistical Portraits of American Business Elites: a Review Essay." Business History 2003 45(4): 89-113. ISSN 0007-6791
  • Groner, Alex. The American heritage history of American business & industry, (ISBN 0070011567) (1972), very well illustrated
  • Krooss, Herman Edward. American Business History (ISBN 0130240834) (1972)
  • Lamoreaux, Naomi R.; Raff, Daniel M. G.; and Temin, Peter. "Beyond Markets and Hierarchies: Toward a New Synthesis of American Business History." American Historical Review 2003 108(2): 404–433. online
  • Lamoreaux, Naomi R., and Daniel M. G. Raff, eds. Coordination and Information: Historical Perspectives on the Organization of Enterprise (1995)
  • McCraw, Thomas K., and William R. Childs. American Business Since 1920: How It Worked (3rd ed. 2018) excerpt
  • Porter, Glenn. The rise of big business, 1860-1920 (3rd ed. 2005)
  • Schweikart, Larry. The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in the United States (2000)
  • Serwer, Andy, et al. American Enterprise: A History of Business in America (2015) excerpt
  • Temin, Peter, ed. Inside the Business Enterprise: Historical Perspectives on the Transformation and Use of Information (1992)
  • Walker, Juliet E. K. Encyclopedia of African American Business History Greenwood Press, 1999
  • Waterhouse, Benjamin C. The Land of Enterprise: A Business History of the United States (Simon & Schuster, 2017). 280 pp
  • Whitten, David O. The Emergence of Giant Enterprise, 1860-1914: American Commercial Enterprise and Extractive Industries (1983)

Textbooks and surveys: World

  • Amatori, Franco and Geoffrey Jones, eds. Business History around the World at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century (2003) pp 192–214; historiography
  • Berghahn, Volker R. Quest for Economic Empire: European Strategies of German Big Business in the Twentieth Century 1996
  • Blackford Mansel G. The Rise of Modern Business in Great Britain, the United States, and Japan (1998)
  • Cassis, Youssef. Big Business: The European Experience in the Twentieth Century (Oxford UP, 1999)
  • Cassis, Youssef, François Crouzet, and Terry Gourvish, eds. Management and Business in Britain and France: The Age of the Corporate Economy (1995).
  • Chandler, Alfred D., Jr. Shaping the Industrial Century: The Remarkable Story of the Evolution of the Modern Chemical and Pharmaceutical Industries. (Harvard Studies in Business History, no. 46.) 2005.
  • Chandler, Alfred D., Jr. Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism (1990)
  • Chapman, Stanley. Merchant Enterprise In Britain (2003)
  • Church, Roy, and Andrew Godley. The Emergence of Modern Marketing (2003)
  • Dávila, Carlos, Rory Miller, and Garry Mills. Business History in Latin America: The Experience of Seven Countries Liverpool University Press, 1999 * Gardella, Robert, Jane K. Leonard, Andrea McElderry; Chinese Business History: Interpretive Trends and Priorities for the Future M. E. Sharpe, 1998
  • Goodall, F., Gourvish, T. and Tolliday, S. (eds.). International bibliography of business history. London and New York: Routledge, 1997. link.
  • Hunt, Edwin S.. and James M. Murray. A History of Business in Medieval Europe, 1200-1550 1999
  • Jones, Geoffrey. The Evolution of International Business: An Introduction (1996)
  • Jones, Geoffrey. Multinationals and Global Capitalism. From the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century(2005)
  • Jones, Geoffrey., and Jonathan Zeitlin (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Business History(2008)
  • Jones, Geoffrey. Beauty Imagined. A History of the Global Beauty Industry(2010)
  • Jones, Geoffrey. Entrepreneurship and Multinationals. Global Business and the Making of the Modern World(2013)
  • Jones, Geoffrey. Profits and Sustainability. A History of Green Entrepreneurship(2017)
  • Kirby, Maurice W. Business Enterprise in Modern Britain: From the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century (1994)
  • Klassen, Henry Cornelius. Business History of Alberta (1999), on Canada
  • Kuisel, Richard F. Capitalism and the State in Modern France: Renovation and Economic Management in the Twentieth Century (1981).
  • Lamoreaux, Naomi R., Daniel Raff, and Peter Temin, eds. Learning by Doing in Organizations, Markets, and Nations (1999).
  • Landes, David S. Joel Mokyr and William J. Baumol, eds. The Invention of Enterprise: Entrepreneurship from Ancient Mesopotamia to Modern Times (2010) 566 pp. ISBN 978-0-691-14370-5
  • Landes, David S. "French Entrepreneurship and Industrial Growth in the Nineteenth Century," Journal of Economic History (1949) 9#1 pp. 45–61 in JSTOR
  • Magnuson, William. For Profit: A History of Corporations (2022) excerpt
  • Mathias, Peter, and M. M. Postan, eds. Cambridge Economic History of Europe. Vol. 7: Industrial Economies. Capital, Labour, and Enterprise. Part 1 Britain, France, Germany and Scandinavia (1978) pp 231–81.
  • Millward, Robert. The State and Business in the Major Powers: An Economic History 1815-1939 (2013)
  • Mokyr, Joel. ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Economic History 4 vol (2003)
  • Moss, Michael, and Philippe Jobert, eds. The Birth and Death of Companies: An Historical Perspective (1990), on Europe
  • Pohl, Manfred, and Sabine Freitag, eds. Handbook on the history of European banks (1994) online
  • Sabel, Charles F., and Jonathan Zeitlin, eds. World of Possibilities: Flexibility and Mass Production in Western Industrialization, (1997)
  • Sluyterman, Keetie E. Dutch Enterprise in the Twentieth Century: Business Strategies in a Small Open Economy (2005)
  • Teich, Mikuláš and Roy Porter, eds. The Industrial Revolution in National Context: Europe and the USA (1996) 445pp; 127 scholarly essays on every major country. excerpt
  • Tignor, Robert L. "The Business Firm in Africa." Business History Review 2007 81(1): 87-110.
  • Wilson, John F. British Business History, 1720-1994 (1995)

Historiography

  • Amatori, Franco, and Geoffrey Jones, eds. Business History Around the World (2003)
  • Barbero, María Inés. "Business History in Latin America: A Historiographical Perspective," Business History Review, Autumn 2008, Vol. 82 Issue 3, pp 555–575
  • Cheta, Omar Youssef. "The economy by other means: The historiography of capitalism in the modern Middle East." History Compass (April 2018) 16#4 DOI: 10.1111/hic3.12444
  • Decker, Stephanie, Matthias Kipping, and R. Daniel Wadhwani. "New business histories! Plurality in business history research methods." Business History (2015) 57#1 pp: 30–40. online
  • Decker, Stephanie. "The silence of the archives: business history, post-colonialism and archival ethnography." Management & Organizational History 8.2 (2013): 155–173. online
  • Engel, Von Alexander. "Die Transformation von Märkten und die Entstehung moderner Unternehmen," [The Transformation of Markets and the Emergence of Modern Enterprises] Jahrbuch fuer Wirtschaftsgeschichte (2012), Issue 2, pp 93–111
  • Fischer, Wolfram. "Some Recent Developments of Business History in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland." Business History Review (1963): 416–436. online
  • Friedman, Walter A., and Geoffrey Jones. "Time for Debate,"Business History Review, (Autumn 2011) 85#1 pp:1-8.
  • Friedman, Walter A., and Geoffrey Jones, eds. Business History (2014) 720pp; reprint of scholarly articles published 1934 to 2012
  • Galambos, Louis. American Business History. Service Center for Teachers of History. 1967, historiographical pamphlet.
  • Grafe, Regina, and Oscar Gelderblom. "The Rise and Fall of the Merchant Guilds: Re-thinking the Comparative Study of Commercial Institutions in Premodern Europe," Journal of Interdisciplinary History, (2010) 40#4 pp 477–511. online; Comparative study of the origins and development of merchant guilds in Europe, esp. their emergence during the late Middle Ages and their decline in the Early Modern era
  • Gras, N.S.B. and Henrietta M. Larson. Casebook in American Business History (1939), with short biographies, company histories and outlines of the main issues
  • Gras, N. S. B. "Are You Writing a Business History?" Bulletin of the Business Historical Society 1944 18(4): 73-110. detailed guide to writing one; in JSTOR
  • Hansen, Per H., “Business History: A Cultural and Narrative Approach,” Business History Review, 86 (Winter 2012), 693–717. online
  • Harvey, Charles. Business History: concepts and measurement (1989)
  • Harvey, Charles, and John Turner. Labour and Business in Modern Britain 1989
  • Hashino, Tomoko, and Osamu Saito. "Tradition and interaction: research trends in modern Japanese industrial history," Australian Economic History Review, Nov 2004, Vol. 44 Issue 3, pp 241–258
  • Honeyman, Katrina. "Doing Business with Gender: Service Industries and British Business History." Business History Review 2007 81(3): 471–493.
  • John, Richard R. "Elaborations, Revisions, Dissents: Alfred D. Chander, Jr.'s, The Visible Hand after Twenty Years," Business History Review 71 (Summer 1997): 151–200. online
  • John, Richard R. "Business historians and the challenge of innovation." Business History Review 85.1 (2011): 185–201. online
  • Johnman, Lewis and Murphy, Hugh. "Maritime and Business History in Britain: Past, Present, and Future?" International Journal of Maritime History 2007 19(1): 239–270. ISSN 0843-8714
  • Kirkland, Edward C. "The Robber Barons Revisited," The American Historical Review, Vol. 66, No. 1. (Oct., 1960), pp. 68–73. in JSTOR
  • Klass, Lance, and Susan Kinnell. Corporate America: A Historical Bibliography 1984
  • Klein, Maury. "Coming Full Circle: the Study of Big Business since 1950." Enterprise & Society: the International Journal of Business History 2001 2(3): 425–460. ISSN 1467-2227 Fulltext: OUP
  • Laird, Pamela Walker. "How business historians can save the world–from the fallacy of self-made success." Business History 59.8 (2017): 1201–1217.
  • Larson, Henrietta M. "Business History: Retrospect and Prospect." Bulletin of the Business Historical Society 1947 21(6): 173–199. in Jstor
  • McCarthy, Dennis M. International Business History: A Contextual and Case Approach (1994)
  • McElderry, Andrea Lee, Jane Kate Leonard, and Robert Gardella. Chinese Business History: Interpretive Trends and Priorities for the Future (1998)
  • Mordhorst, Mads, and Stefan Schwarzkopf. "Theorising narrative in business history." Business History 59.8 (2017): 1155–1175. online
  • Perchard, Andrew, et al. "Clio in the business school: Historical approaches in strategy, international business, and entrepreneurship." Business History 59.6 (2017): 904-927 online.
  • Perks, Rob. "The roots of oral history: exploring contrasting attitudes to elite, corporate, and business oral history in Britain and the US." Oral History Review 37.2 (2010): 215–224. online
  • Rollings, Neil. "British Business History: a Review of the Periodical Literature for 2005." Business History 2007 49(3): 271–292. ISSN 0007-6791
  • Scranton, Philip, and Patrick Fridenson. Reimagining Business History (2013) online review[dead link]
  • Supple, Barry Emmanuel. Essays in British Business History (1977)
  • Toms, Steven and Wilson, John F. "Scale, Scope and Accountability: Towards a New Paradigm of British Business History." Business History 2003 45(4): 1-23. ISSN 0007-6791
  • Tucker, Kenneth Arthur. Business History: Selected Readings (1977)

Special studies: world

  • Bowen, H. V. Business of Empire: The East India Company and Imperial Britain, 1756-1833 (2006), 304pp

Special studies: U.S.

  • Bailyn, Bernard. The New England Merchants in the Seventeenth Century (1955).
  • Bursk, Edward C., et al. eds. The World Of Business Harvard Business School (4 vol. 1962); 2,700 pages of business insight, memoirs, history, fiction, & analysis
  • Cochran, Thomas C. The Pabst Brewing Company: The History of an American Business (1948)
  • Cole, Arthur H. The American Wool Manufacture 2 vol (1926)
  • Dicke, Thomas S. Franchising in America: The Development of a Business Method, 1840-1980 (1992)
  • Doerflinger, Thomas M. A Vigorous Spirit of Enterprise: Merchants and Economic Development in Revolutionary Philadelphia (1986)
  • Friedman, Walter A. Birth of a Salesman. The Transformation of Selling in America(2005)
  • Friedman, Walter A. Fortune Tellers. The Story of America's First Economic Forecasters(2013)
  • Pak, Susie J. Gentlemen Bankers. The World of J.P. Morgan (2013)
  • Scranton, Philip. Proprietary Capitalism: The Textile Manufacture at Philadelphia, 1800–1885 (1983)
  • Scranton, Philip. Figured Tapestry: Production, Markets, and Power in Philadelphia Textiles, 1885–1941 (1989).
  • Tucker, Barbara M. Samuel Slater and the Origins of the American Textile Industry, 1790–1860 (1984)
  • Weare, Walter B. Black Business in the New South: A Social History of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company (1993)
  • Wilkins, Mira. The Emergence of Multinational Enterprise(1970)
  • Wilkins, Mira. The Maturing of Multinational Enterprise (1974)
  • Wilkins, Mira. The History of Foreign Investment in the United States before 1914(1989)
  • Wilkins, Mira. The History of Foreign Investment in the United States 1914-1945(2004)
  • Williamson, Harold F. and Arnold R. Daum. The American Petroleum Industry: The Age of Illumination, 1859-1899, (1959); vol 2, American Petroleum Industry: the Age of Energy 1899-1959, 1964. The standard history of the oil industry.

business, history, this, article, about, subject, journal, business, history, journal, historiographical, field, which, examines, history, firms, business, methods, government, regulation, effects, business, society, also, includes, biographies, individual, fi. This article is about the subject For the journal see Business History journal Business history is a historiographical field which examines the history of firms business methods government regulation and the effects of business on society It also includes biographies of individual firms executives and entrepreneurs It is related to economic history 1 It is distinct from company history which refers to official histories usually funded by the company itself Contents 1 United States 1 1 Robber baron debate 1 2 Academic studies 1 3 Ranking entrepreneurs and management theorists 1 4 Chandler 1 5 Other mechanisms 1 6 Comparative 2 France 3 Latin America 4 Britain 5 Africa 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 7 1 Textbooks and surveys USA 7 2 Textbooks and surveys World 7 3 Historiography 7 4 Special studies world 7 5 Special studies U S United States EditMain article American business history Robber baron debate Edit Main article Robber baron industrialist Even before academic studies began Americans were enthralled by the Robber baron debate 2 3 4 As the United States industrialized very rapidly after the Civil War a few hundred prominent men made large fortunes by building and controlling major industries such as railroads shipping steel mining and banking Yet the newer who gathered the most attention was railroader Cornelius Vanderbilt Historian Stephen Frazier argues that probably most Americans admired Vanderbilt they agreed with biographer William Augustus Croffut who wrote in 1886 It is now known that the desire to own property is the chief difference between the Savage and the enlightened man that aggregations of money in the hands of individuals are in inestimable blessing to Society for without them there could be no public improvements or private enterprises no railroads or steamships or telegraphs no cities the leisure class no schools colleges literature art in short no civilization The one man to whom the community owes most is the capitalist that the menu gives but the man who saves and invests so that his property reproduces and multiplies itself instead of being consumed 5 However Fraser goes on there was a minority who vehemently dissented A minority were irate and excoriated the titans of finance and industry as robber barons and worse E L Godkin founder of The Nation launched a volley of invective at the new plutocracy kings of the street like Vanderbilt displayed unmitigated and immitigable selfishness as appalling as their audacity push unscrupulousness and brazen disregard of others rights 6 By the Great Depression of the 1930s Fraser continues Biographies of Mellon Carnegie and Rockefeller were often laced with moral censure warning that tories of industry were a threat to democracy and that parasitism aristocratic pretension and tyranny have always trailed in the wake of concentrated wealth whether accumulated dynastically or more impersonally by the faceless corporation This scholarship and the cultural persuasion of which it was an expression drew on a deeply rooted sensibility partly religious partly egalitarian and democratic that stretched back to William Jennings Bryan Andrew Jackson and Tom Paine 7 However a counterattack by academic historians began as the Depression ended Business historian Allan Nevins challenged this view of big businessmen by advocating the Industrial Statesman thesis Nevins in his John D Rockefeller The Heroic Age of American Enterprise 2 vols 1940 took on Josephson He argued that while Rockefeller may have engaged in some unethical and illegal business practices this should not overshadow his bringing order to industrial chaos of the day Gilded Age capitalists according to Nevins sought to impose order and stability on competitive business and that their work made the United States the foremost economy by the 20th century 8 Business journalist Ferdinand Lundberg later criticized Nevins for confusing readers 9 By contrast historian Priscilla Roberts argues that Nevins studies of inventors and businessmen brought about a reassessment of American industrialization and its leaders She writes Nevins argued that economic development in the United States caused relatively little human suffering while raising the general standard of living and making the United States the great industrial power capable of defeating Germany in both world wars The great capitalists of that period should he argued be viewed not as robber barons but as men whose economic self interest had played an essentially positive role in American history and who had done nothing criminal by the standards of their time 10 Historians have followed Nevins lead in writing biographies of the major industrialists of the Gilded Age These include David Cannadine Mellon An American Life New York Alfred A Knopf 2006 Ron Chernow The House of Morgan An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance New York Atlantic Monthly Press 1990 Ron Chernow Titan The Life of John D Rockefeller Sr New York Random House 2007 George Harvey Henry Clay Frick The Man Washington D C Beard Books 2002 David Nasaw Andrew Carnegie New York Penguin Press 2006 T J Stiles The First Tycoon The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt New York Alfred A Knopf 2009 Jean Strouse Morgan American Financier New York Random House 1999 Though these later biographers did not confer heroic status on their subjects they used historical and biographical investigations to establish a more complex understanding of the American past and the history of American economic development in particular In 1958 historian Hal Bridges finds that The most vehement and persistent controversy in business history has been that waged by the critics and defenders of the robber baron concept of the American businessman 11 In terms of the Robber Baron model by the end of the 20th century scholars had mostly discarded it although it remained influential in the popular culture Richard White historian of the transcontinental railroads stated in 2011 he has no use for the concept because it had been killed off by historians Robert H Wiebe and Alfred Chandler He notes that Much of the modern history of corporations is a reaction against the Robber Barons and fictions 12 Academic studies Edit Meanwhile business history as an academic discipline was founded by Professor N S B Gras at the Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration starting in 1927 He defined the field s subject matter and approach wrote the first general treatise in the field and helped Harvard build a tradition of scholarship as well as the leading library in the field He edited a series of monographs the Harvard Studies in Business History He also served as editor of the Bulletin of the Business Historical Society 1926 1953 a journal which later became the Business History Review 1954 date N S B Grass and Henrietta M Larson Casebook in American business history 1939 defined the field for a generation 13 Business history in the U S took off in the 1960s with a high volume of products and innovative methodologies Scholars worked to develop theoretical explanations of the growth of the business enterprise the study of strategy and structure by Alfred Chandler being a prime example The relationship between business and the federal government became a focal point of the study On the whole the 1960s affirmed the conclusions of the earlier decades regarding the close interrelationship between government and business enterprise 14 Ranking entrepreneurs and management theorists Edit A 2002 survey of 58 business history professors gave the top spot in the history of American business entrepreneurs to Henry Ford followed by Bill Gates John D Rockefeller Andrew Carnegie and Thomas Edison Also included were Sam Walton J P Morgan Alfred P Sloan Walt Disney Ray Kroc Thomas J Watson Alexander Graham Bell Eli Whitney James J Hill Jack Welch Cyrus McCormick David Packard Bill Hewlett Cornelius Vanderbilt and George Westinghouse 15 A 1977 survey of management scholars reported the top five pioneers in management ideas were Frederick Winslow Taylor Chester Barnard Frank Bunker Gilbreth Elton Mayo and Lillian Moller Gilbreth 16 An emphasis on expertise can be seen as defining an era of management work shown in the works of Elton Mayo Chester Barnard Mary Parker Follett Max Weber Chris Argyris and Peter Drucker Drucker introduced the term knowledge work in 1959 17 and has been described as the founder of modern management 18 Chandler Edit After 1960 the most influential scholar was Alfred D Chandler Jr 1918 2007 at the Harvard Business School In a career that spanned over sixty years Chandler produced numerous groundbreaking monographs articles and reviews Intensely focused on only a few areas of the discipline Chandler nonetheless succeeded in establishing and developing an entirely new realm of business history 19 20 21 Chandler s masterwork was The Visible Hand The Managerial Revolution in American Business 1977 His first two chapters looked at traditional owner operated small business operations in commerce and production including the largest among them the slave plantations in the South Chapters 3 5 summarize the history of railroad management with stress on innovations not just in technology but also in accounting finance and statistics He then turned to the new business operations made possible by the rail system in mass distribution such as jobbers department stores and mail order A quick survey ch 8 review mass innovation in mass production The integration of mass distribution and mass production ch 9 11 led to many mergers and the emergence of giant industrial corporations by 1900 Management for Chandler was much more than the CEO it was the whole system of techniques and included middle management ch 11 as well as the corporate structure of the biggest firms Standard Oil General Electric US Steel and DuPont ch 13 14 Chandler argued that modern large scale firms arose to take advantage of the national markets and productive techniques available after the rail network was in place He found that they prospered because they had higher productivity lower costs and higher profits The firms created the managerial class in America because they needed to coordinate the increasingly complex and interdependent system This ability to achieve efficiency through coordination not some anti competitive monopolistic greed by robber barons explained the high levels of concentration in modern American industry 22 Chandler s work was somewhat ignored in history departments but proved influential in business economics and sociology departments 23 In sociology for example prior to Chandler s research sociologists assumed there were no differences between governmental corporate and nonprofit organizations Chandler s focus on corporations clearly demonstrated that there were differences and this thesis has guided organizational sociologists work since the 1970s It also motivated sociologists to investigate and critique Chandler s work more closely turning up instances in which Chandler assumed American corporations acted for reasons of efficiency when they actually operated in a context of politics or conflict 24 Other historians such as Gabriel Kolko challenged the very notion of efficiency through coordination arguing instead that big business had for reasons of inefficiency and a dislike of market discipline openly sought government assistance to keep market forces at bay Other mechanisms Edit Lamoreaux et al 2003 offers a new synthesis of American business history during the 19th 20th centuries Moving beyond the markets versus hierarchies framework that underlies the previously dominant interpretation of Chandler the authors highlight the great variety of coordination mechanisms in use in the economy at any given time Drawing on late 20th century theoretical work in economics they show how the relative advantages and disadvantages of these different mechanisms have shifted in complex and often unpredictable ways as a result of changing economic circumstances One advantage of this perspective is that it avoids the teleology that has characterized so much writing in the field As a result the authors can situate the New Economy of the late 20th century in broad historical context without succumbing to the temptation to view it as a climactic stage in the process of economic development They thus provide a particularly persuasive example of the importance of business history to the understanding of national and international history 25 A number of sources address the history of business management as it has developed as a profession From Higher Aims to Hired Hands The Social Transformation of American Business Schools and the Unfulfilled Promise of Management as a Profession 2007 by Rakesh Khurana traces the rise and development of American management as a profession and argues that its promise has been unfulfilled A key event was the publication of the Gordon Howell report Higher Education for Business 1959 by economists Robert Aaron Gordon and James Edwin Howell Funded by the Ford Foundation the report gave detailed recommendations for treating management as a science and improving the academic quality of business schools 26 27 28 29 30 Another influential report that same year was The Education Of American Businessmen A Study Of University College Programs In Business Administration 1959 by Frank Cook Pierson 31 The next thirty years are sometimes referred to as a Golden Age in which quantitative social science research became an established part of business schools 32 26 By the 1990s however there was a gap between theory oriented business school faculty and the more applied interests of students and business practitioners In 1993 Donald C Hambrick s presidential address to the Academy of Management AoM What if the Academy Actually Mattered drew attention to this relevance crisis The theme has been repeatedly visited since then including by president Anita M McGahan in 2017 26 27 33 34 Another major focus of concern has been the replication crisis Anne S Tsui has suggested that business and management should not treat the issues of rigor credibility of evidence and relevance usefulness of knowledge separately but see them as related 35 Comparative Edit Understanding the development of business history as a discipline meriting its own aims theories and methods is often understood as a transition from dominating themes of company biography toward more analytical comparative approaches This comparative trend enabled practitioners to underline their work with generalist potential Questions of comparative business performance have become a staple featuring into the wider economic histories of nations regions and communities For many this transition was first achieved by Alfred D Chandler Chandler s successors as Isidor Straus Professor of Business History at Harvard Business School continued to emphasize the importance of comparative research and course development In 1995 Thomas K McCraw published Creating Modern Capitalism Cambridge MA 1995 36 This book compared the business histories of Britain Germany Japan and the United States since the Industrial Revolution and was used as the text of a new year MBA course at Harvard Business School Geoffrey Jones who was McCraw s successor as Isidor Straus Professor of Business History also pursued a comparative research agenda He published a comparative study of the history of globalization called Multinationals and Global Capitalism Oxford 2005 37 In 2010 Jones also published a comparative history of the global beauty industry entitled Beauty Imagined A History of the Global Beauty Industry Oxford 2010 38 More recently Jones and the Business History Initiative at the Harvard Business School has sought to facilitate research and teaching on African Asian and Latin American business history in a project called Creating Emerging Markets which includes interviews with long time leaders of firms and NGOs in those regions 39 40 41 A trend in recent years has been to compare the business histories of individual countries Geoffrey Jones academic and Andrea Lluch have published a comparative study of the historical impact of globalization on Argentina and Chile 42 In 2011 Jones and his co editor Walter A Friedman published an editorial in Business History Review which identified comparative research as essential for the future of business history as a discipline 43 Anne S Tsui has studied business in both the United States and China and encourages scholars to collaborate internationally and to study leadership as it is practiced in China 26 44 France EditAmerican historians working in French business history led by Rondo Cameron argued that most of the business enterprises in France were family owned small in scale and managed conservatively 45 By contrast French business historians emphasized the success of national economic planning since the end of World War II They argued that the economic development in this period stemmed from various phenomena of the late 19th century the corporation system the joint stock deposit and investment banks and the technological innovations in the steel industry To clarify the contributions of 19th century entrepreneurs to the economic development in France French scholars support two journals Enterprises et Histoire and Revue d Histoire de la Siderurgie 46 47 Latin America EditBarbero 2008 examines the development of the field of Latin American business history from the 1960s to 2007 Latin American business history developed in the 1960s but until the 1980s it was dominated by either highly politicized debates over Latin American underdevelopment or biographies of Latin American entrepreneurs Since the 1980s Latin American business history has become a much more professionalized and an integrated part of Latin American academia It is much less politicized and has moved beyond entrepreneurial biography to histories of companies and industries However Latin American business historians have still not devoted enough attention to agricultural enterprises or comparative histories between the many countries Probably most importantly Latin American business historians have to become much more versed in business history theory and methodology so as to get beyond mere summation of the region s economic past 48 49 In the 1980s numerous governments in Latin America adopted neoliberal policies 50 51 In Mexico for example under presidents Carlos Salinas de Gortari 1988 94 and Ernesto Zedillo neoliberalism became the basis for state private sector relationships The new policy allowed for close cooperation with United States and Canada as exemplified by the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA solidified a strategic alliance between the state and business 52 In Brazil The key policy was privatization of nationalized industries especially steel through the Programa Nacional de Desestatizcao National Program of Destatization during the early 1990s It aimed to implement a new industrial policy by restructuring the industry and reforming labor business relations 53 54 The Common Market of the South or Mercosur is a South American commerce pact started in 1991 among Argentina Brazil Paraguay and Uruguay at the instigation of Argentina and Brazil 55 Mercosur s purpose is to promote free trade and the fluid movement of goods people and currency Since its foundation Mercosur s functions have been updated and amended many times it currently confines itself to a customs union in which there is free intra zone trade and common trade policy between member countries 56 Britain EditBusiness History in Britain emerged in the 1950s following the publication of a series of influential company histories and the establishment of the journal Business History 57 in 1958 at the University of Liverpool The most influential of these early company histories was Charles Wilson historian s History of Unilever the first volume of which was published in 1954 Other examples included Coleman s work on Courtaulds and artificial fibers Alford on Wills and the tobacco industry Barker on Pilkington s and glass manufacture 58 59 These early studies were conducted primarily by economic historians interested in the role of leading firms in the development of the wider industry and therefore went beyond mere corporate histories Although some work examined the successful industries of the industrial revolution and the role of the key entrepreneurs in the 1970s scholarly debate in British business history became increasingly focused on the economic decline For economic historians the loss of British competitive advantage after 1870 could at least in part be explained by entrepreneurial failure prompting further business history research into the individual industry and corporate cases The Lancashire cotton textile industry which had been the leading take off sector in the industrial revolution but which was slow to invest in subsequent technical developments became an important topic of debate on this subject William Lazonick for example argued that cotton textile entrepreneurs in Britain failed to develop larger integrated plants on the American model a conclusion similar to Chandler s synthesis of a number of comparative case studies 60 61 Studies of British business leaders have emphasized how they fit into the class structure especially their relationship to the aristocracy and the desire to use their wealth to purchase landed estates and hereditary titles 62 63 64 Biography has been of less importance in British business history but there are compilations 65 British business history began to widen its scope in the 1980s with research work conducted at the LSE s Business History Unit led first by Leslie Hannah then by Terry Gourvish Other research centres followed notably at Glasgow and Reading reflecting an increasing involvement in the discipline by Business and Management School academics More recent editors of Business History Geoffrey Jones academic Harvard Business School Charles Harvey University of Newcastle Business School John Wilson Liverpool University Management School and Steven Toms Leeds University Business School have promoted management strategy themes such as networks family capitalism corporate governance human resource management marketing and brands and multi national organisations in their international as well as merely British context Employing these new themes has allowed business historians to challenge and adapt the earlier conclusions of Chandler and others about the performance of the British economy 66 Africa EditThere is a growing body of work of business history in Africa In one of the recent works Ebimo Amungo chronicled the birth growth and contributions of indigenous African multinationals to the economic development of Africa with his book The Rise of the African Multinational Enterprise 67 Notes Edit Claus Peter Marriott John 2012 History An Introduction to Theory Method and Practice 2 ed London Taylor amp Francis published 2017 p 214 ISBN 9781317409878 Retrieved 2018 07 06 Essentially business history is concerned with how production and the delivery of goods and services was organized in the past by an individual a sole trader a group of individuals a partnership or a joint stock limited liability concern the modern company It is also concerned with understanding the processes underlying decision making All this makes business history distinct from economic history although they are clearly allied Peter d A Jones ed The Robber Barons Revisited 1968 summarizes the debate and provides excerpts from primary and secondary sources Thomas C Cochran The Legend of the Robber Barons Explorations in Economic History 1 5 1949 online Hal Bridges The Robber Baron Concept in American History Business History Review 1958 32 1 pp 1 13 in JSTOR William Augustus Croffut 1886 The Vanderbilts and the Story of Their Fortune Belford Clarke p 275 Steve Fraser The Misunderstood Robber Baron On Cornelius Vanderbilt T J Stiles s The First Tycoon is a gilded portrait of the robber baron Cornelius Vanderbilt The Nation Nov 11 2009 Fraser The Misunderstood Robber Baron Allan Nevins John D Rockefeller The Heroic Age of American Enterprise 2 vols 1940 Ferdinand Lundberg The Rockefeller Syndrome New York Lyle Stuart 1975 p 145 Priscilla M Roberts Nevins Allan in Kelly Boyd ed 1999 Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing vol 2 Taylor amp Francis p 869 ISBN 9781884964336 Hal Bridges The Robber Baron Concept in American History Business History Review 1958 32 1 pp 1 13 in JSTOR Richard White Railroaded The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America 2011 pp xxxi 234 508 See N S B Grass and Henrietta M Larson Casebook in American business history 1939 Richard R John Elaborations revisions dissents Alfred D Chandler Jr s the visible Hand after twenty years Business History Review 71 2 1997 151 200 online Blaine McCormick and Burton W Folsom A survey of business historians on America s greatest entrepreneurs Business History Review 77 4 2003 703 716 online Joyce Thompson Heames and Jacob W Breland Management pioneer contributors 30 year review Journal of Management History 16 4 2010 427 436 online McGrath Rita Gunther 30 July 2014 Management s Three Eras A Brief History Harvard Business Review Retrieved 22 March 2022 Denning Steve August 29 2014 The Best Of Peter Drucker Forbes Richard R John Elaborations Revisions Dissents Alfred D Chandler Jr s The Visible Hand after Twenty Years Business History Review 1997 7 1 pp 151 200 online Richard R John Turner Beard Chandler Progressive Historians Business History Review 82 02 2008 227 240 Pamela Walker Laird Alfred D Chandler Jr and the Landscape of Marketing History Journal of Macromarketing 20 2 2000 167 173 Steven W Usselman Still Visible Alfred D Chandler s The Visible Hand Technology and Culture vol 47 3 2006 584 596 Thomas K McCraw Alfred Chandler His Vision and Achievement Business History Review Summer 2008 Vol 82 Issue 2 pp 207 226 Neil Fligstein Chandler and the Sociology of Organizations Business History Review Summer 2008 Vol 82 Issue 2 pp 241 250 Naomi R Lamoreaux et al Beyond Markets and Hierarchies Toward a New Synthesis of American Business History American Historical Review 2003 108 2 404 433 a b c d Tsui Anne S 21 January 2022 From Traditional Research to Responsible Research The Necessity of Scientific Freedom and Scientific Responsibility for Better Societies Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior 9 1 1 32 doi 10 1146 annurev orgpsych 062021 021303 ISSN 2327 0608 S2CID 244238570 Retrieved 21 March 2022 a b Khurana Rakesh 2007 From higher aims to hired hands the social transformation of American business schools and the unfulfilled promise of management as a profession Princeton Princeton University Press p 273 ISBN 9780691145877 McLaren Patricia Genoe March 2019 Stop Blaming Gordon and Howell Unpacking the Complex History Behind the Research Based Model of Education Academy of Management Learning amp Education 18 1 43 58 doi 10 5465 amle 2017 0311 S2CID 149571315 The more things change The Economist 4 June 2009 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Hutchins John G B 1960 Review of Higher Education for Business The Education of American Business Men A Study in University College Programs in Business Administration Administrative Science Quarterly 5 2 279 295 doi 10 2307 2390781 ISSN 0001 8392 JSTOR 2390781 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Pierson Frank 1 January 1959 The Education Of American Businessmen A Study Of University College Programs In Business Administration Books by Alumni New York McGraw Hill McKiernan P Tsui A S 2020 Responsible Research in Business and Management transforming doctoral education In Moosmayer DC Laasch O Parkes C Brown KG eds The Sage Handbook of Responsible Management Learning and Education Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publ pp 485 501 Hambrick Donald C 1 January 1994 What if the Academy Actually Mattered Academy of Management Review 19 1 11 16 doi 10 5465 amr 1994 9410122006 ISSN 0363 7425 Retrieved 22 March 2022 McGahan A 2018 2017 Presidential address Freedom in scholarship lessons from Atlanta Acad Manag Rev 43 2 173 78 doi 10 5465 amr 2017 0580 Tsui Anne S 1 June 2021 Responsible Research and Responsible Leadership Studies Academy of Management Discoveries 7 2 166 170 doi 10 5465 amd 2019 0244 S2CID 211438268 Retrieved 23 March 2022 Thomas K McCraw 1995 Creating Modern Capitalism Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 17555 7 Geoffrey Jones 2005 Multinationals and Global Capitalism Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 927210 7 Geoffrey Jones 2010 Beauty Imagined A History of the Global Beauty Industry Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199556496 Creating Emerging Markets Creating Emerging Markets Harvard Business School Creating Emerging Markets Harvard Business School Thriving in the Turbulence of Emerging Markets Working Knowledge The Thinking That Leads Harvard Business School 14 January 2015 Building Histories of Emerging Economies One Interview at a Time Working Knowledge The Thinking That Leads Harvard Business School 28 May 2014 Geoffrey Jones Andrea Lluch 2015 The Impact of Globalization on Argentina and Chile Business Enterprises and Entrepreneurship Edward Elgar ISBN 978 1 78347 363 2 Walter A Friedman Geoffrey Jones 2011 Time for Debate Business History Review 85 3 1 8 doi 10 1017 S0007680511000201 Kawamura Kristine Marin 1 January 2013 Dr Kristine Marin Kawamura interviews Anne Tsui PhD Cross Cultural Management 20 2 doi 10 1108 ccm 2013 13620baa 009 ISSN 1352 7606 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Tom Kemp French economic performance some new views critically examined European History Quarterly 15 4 1985 473 488 Youssef Cassis Business History in France in Franco Amatori and Geoffrey Jones eds Business history around the world Cambridge University Press 2003 pp 192 214 Francois Crouzet The historiography of French economic growth in the nineteenth century Economic History Review 56 2 2003 215 242 Maria Ines Barbero Business History in Latin America A Historiographical Perspective Business History Review 2008 82 3 pp 555 575 Carlos Marichal Archival Note Banking History and Archives in Latin America Business History Review 2008 82 3 pp 585 602 Gerardo Otero The neoliberal food regime in Latin America state agribusiness transnational corporations and biotechnology Canadian Journal of Development Studies Revue canadienne d etudes du developpement 33 3 2012 282 294 Ben Ross Schneider The material bases of technocracy Investor confidence and neoliberalism in Latin America in The politics of expertise in Latin America edited by Miguel A Centeno and Patricio Silva Palgrave Macmillan 1998 pp 77 95 Online Archived 2020 05 31 at the Wayback Machine Remonda Bensabat Kleinberg Strategic Alliances State Business Relations in Mexico Under Neo Liberalism and Crisis Bulletin of Latin American Research 18 1 1999 71 87 Ben Ross Schneider The developmental state in Brazil comparative and historical perspectives Brazilian Journal of Political Economy 35 1 2015 114 132 Jose Ignacio Vega Fernandez Neoliberalism and Neo Developmentalism as Promoters of Capitalist Aquaculture in Brazil in State Capitalism Under Neoliberalism The Case of Agriculture and Food in Brazil 2019 147 Gian Luca Gardini Who Invented Mercosur Diplomacy and Statecraft 18 4 2007 805 830 Laura Gomez Mera Lessons from Latin America MERCOSUR in Region Building in Africa Palgrave Macmillan New York 2016 297 312 see Business History Archived 2011 04 14 at the Wayback Machine John Wilson and Steven Toms J S Fifty years of Business History Business History 2008 50 2 pp 125 26 Leslie Hannah New Issues in British Business History Business History Review 1983 57 2 pp 165 174 Chandler A Scale and Scope The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism Cambridge Mass Belknap Press 1990 William Mass amp William Lazonick The British Cotton Industry and International Competitive Advantage the state of the debates Business History 1990 32 4 pp 9 65 Howard L Malchow Gentlemen capitalists the social and political world of the Victorian businessman Stanford University Press 19920 William D Rubinstein Wealth elites and the class structure of modern Britain Past amp Present 76 1977 99 126 Julia A Smith Land ownership and social change in late nineteenth century Britain Economic History Review 53 4 2000 767 776 in JSTOR David J Jeremy ed Dictionary of business biography a biographical dictionary of business leaders active in Britain in the period 1860 1980 Butterworths 1984 Toms Steven and Wilson John F Scale Scope and Accountability Towards a New Paradigm of British Business History Business History 2003 45 4 pp 1 23 Amungo Ebimo 2020 The Rise of the African Multinational Enterprise AMNE Management for Professionals doi 10 1007 978 3 030 33096 5 ISBN 978 3 030 33095 8 ISSN 2192 8096 S2CID 216471932 Bibliography EditTextbooks and surveys USA Edit Blackford Mansel G A History of Small Business in America ISBN 0 8057 9824 2 1992 Blackford Mansel G and K Austin Kerr Business Enterprise in American History ISBN 0395351553 1990 Blaszczyk Regina Lee and Philip B Scranton eds Major Problems in American Business History Documents and Essays 2006 521 pp Bryant Keith L A History of American Business 1983 ISBN 0133892476 Chamberlain John Enterprising Americans A Business History of the United States ISBN 0060107022 1974 by popular journalist Chandler Jr Alfred D The Visible Hand The Managerial Revolution in American Business 1977 highly influential study Chandler Jr Alfred D Strategy and Structure Chapters in the History of the Industrial Enterprise 1962 Chandler Jr Alfred D Scale and Scope The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism 1990 Chandler Jr Alfred D The Competitive Performance of U S Industrial Enterprises since the Second World War Business History Review 68 Spring 1994 1 72 Chandler Alfred D Jr and James W Cortada A Nation Transformed by Information How Information Has Shaped the United States from Colonial Times to the Present 2000 Cochran Thomas Childs Business in American Life A History 1976 Dibacco Thomas V Made in the U S A The History of American Business 1988 ISBN 0060914661 Friedman Walter A and Tedlow Richard S Statistical Portraits of American Business Elites a Review Essay Business History2003 45 4 89 113 ISSN 0007 6791 Groner Alex The American heritage history of American business amp industry ISBN 0070011567 1972 very well illustrated Krooss Herman Edward American Business History ISBN 0130240834 1972 Lamoreaux Naomi R Raff Daniel M G and Temin Peter Beyond Markets and Hierarchies Toward a New Synthesis of American Business History American Historical Review 2003 108 2 404 433 online Lamoreaux Naomi R and Daniel M G Raff eds Coordination and Information Historical Perspectives on the Organization of Enterprise 1995 McCraw Thomas K and William R Childs American Business Since 1920 How It Worked 3rd ed 2018 excerpt Porter Glenn The rise of big business 1860 1920 3rd ed 2005 Schweikart Larry The Entrepreneurial Adventure A History of Business in the United States 2000 Serwer Andy et al American Enterprise A History of Business in America 2015 excerpt Temin Peter ed Inside the Business Enterprise Historical Perspectives on the Transformation and Use of Information 1992 Walker Juliet E K Encyclopedia of African American Business History Greenwood Press 1999 Waterhouse Benjamin C The Land of Enterprise A Business History of the United States Simon amp Schuster 2017 280 pp Whitten David O The Emergence of Giant Enterprise 1860 1914 American Commercial Enterprise and Extractive Industries 1983 Textbooks and surveys World Edit Amatori Franco and Geoffrey Jones eds Business History around the World at the Turn of the Twenty First Century 2003 pp 192 214 historiographyBerghahn Volker R Quest for Economic Empire European Strategies of German Big Business in the Twentieth Century 1996 Blackford Mansel G The Rise of Modern Business in Great Britain the United States and Japan 1998 Cassis Youssef Big Business The European Experience in the Twentieth Century Oxford UP 1999 Cassis Youssef Francois Crouzet and Terry Gourvish eds Management and Business in Britain and France The Age of the Corporate Economy 1995 Chandler Alfred D Jr Shaping the Industrial Century The Remarkable Story of the Evolution of the Modern Chemical and Pharmaceutical Industries Harvard Studies in Business History no 46 2005 Chandler Alfred D Jr Scale and Scope The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism 1990 Chapman Stanley Merchant Enterprise In Britain 2003 Church Roy and Andrew Godley The Emergence of Modern Marketing 2003 Davila Carlos Rory Miller and Garry Mills Business History in Latin America The Experience of Seven Countries Liverpool University Press 1999 Gardella Robert Jane K Leonard Andrea McElderry Chinese Business History Interpretive Trends and Priorities for the FutureM E Sharpe 1998 Goodall F Gourvish T and Tolliday S eds International bibliography of business history London and New York Routledge 1997 link Hunt Edwin S and James M Murray A History of Business in Medieval Europe 1200 1550 1999 Jones Geoffrey The Evolution of International Business An Introduction 1996 Jones Geoffrey Multinationals and Global Capitalism From the Nineteenth to the Twenty First Century 2005 Jones Geoffrey and Jonathan Zeitlin eds The Oxford Handbook of Business History 2008 Jones Geoffrey Beauty Imagined A History of the Global Beauty Industry 2010 Jones Geoffrey Entrepreneurship and Multinationals Global Business and the Making of the Modern World 2013 Jones Geoffrey Profits and Sustainability A History of Green Entrepreneurship 2017 Kirby Maurice W Business Enterprise in Modern Britain From the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century 1994 Klassen Henry Cornelius Business History of Alberta 1999 on Canada Kuisel Richard F Capitalism and the State in Modern France Renovation and Economic Management in the Twentieth Century 1981 Lamoreaux Naomi R Daniel Raff and Peter Temin eds Learning by Doing in Organizations Markets and Nations 1999 Landes David S Joel Mokyr and William J Baumol eds The Invention of Enterprise Entrepreneurship from Ancient Mesopotamia to Modern Times 2010 566 pp ISBN 978 0 691 14370 5 Landes David S French Entrepreneurship and Industrial Growth in the Nineteenth Century Journal of Economic History 1949 9 1 pp 45 61 in JSTORMagnuson William For Profit A History of Corporations 2022 excerptMathias Peter and M M Postan eds Cambridge Economic History of Europe Vol 7 Industrial Economies Capital Labour and Enterprise Part 1 Britain France Germany and Scandinavia 1978 pp 231 81 Millward Robert The State and Business in the Major Powers An Economic History 1815 1939 2013 Mokyr Joel ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Economic History 4 vol 2003 Moss Michael and Philippe Jobert eds The Birth and Death of Companies An Historical Perspective 1990 on Europe Pohl Manfred and Sabine Freitag eds Handbook on the history of European banks 1994 online Sabel Charles F and Jonathan Zeitlin eds World of Possibilities Flexibility and Mass Production in Western Industrialization 1997 Sluyterman Keetie E Dutch Enterprise in the Twentieth Century Business Strategies in a Small Open Economy 2005 Teich Mikulas and Roy Porter eds The Industrial Revolution in National Context Europe and the USA 1996 445pp 127 scholarly essays on every major country excerpt Tignor Robert L The Business Firm in Africa Business History Review 2007 81 1 87 110 Wilson John F British Business History 1720 1994 1995 Historiography Edit Amatori Franco and Geoffrey Jones eds Business History Around the World 2003 Barbero Maria Ines Business History in Latin America A Historiographical Perspective Business History Review Autumn 2008 Vol 82 Issue 3 pp 555 575 Cheta Omar Youssef The economy by other means The historiography of capitalism in the modern Middle East History Compass April 2018 16 4 DOI 10 1111 hic3 12444 Decker Stephanie Matthias Kipping and R Daniel Wadhwani New business histories Plurality in business history research methods Business History 2015 57 1 pp 30 40 online Decker Stephanie The silence of the archives business history post colonialism and archival ethnography Management amp Organizational History 8 2 2013 155 173 online Engel Von Alexander Die Transformation von Markten und die Entstehung moderner Unternehmen The Transformation of Markets and the Emergence of Modern Enterprises Jahrbuch fuer Wirtschaftsgeschichte 2012 Issue 2 pp 93 111 Fischer Wolfram Some Recent Developments of Business History in Germany Austria and Switzerland Business History Review 1963 416 436 online Friedman Walter A and Geoffrey Jones Time for Debate Business History Review Autumn 2011 85 1 pp 1 8 Friedman Walter A and Geoffrey Jones eds Business History 2014 720pp reprint of scholarly articles published 1934 to 2012 Galambos Louis American Business History Service Center for Teachers of History 1967 historiographical pamphlet Grafe Regina and Oscar Gelderblom The Rise and Fall of the Merchant Guilds Re thinking the Comparative Study of Commercial Institutions in Premodern Europe Journal of Interdisciplinary History 2010 40 4 pp 477 511 online Comparative study of the origins and development of merchant guilds in Europe esp their emergence during the late Middle Ages and their decline in the Early Modern era Gras N S B and Henrietta M Larson Casebook in American Business History 1939 with short biographies company histories and outlines of the main issues Gras N S B Are You Writing a Business History Bulletin of the Business Historical Society 1944 18 4 73 110 detailed guide to writing one in JSTOR Hansen Per H Business History A Cultural and Narrative Approach Business History Review 86 Winter 2012 693 717 online Harvey Charles Business History concepts and measurement 1989 Harvey Charles and John Turner Labour and Business in Modern Britain 1989 Hashino Tomoko and Osamu Saito Tradition and interaction research trends in modern Japanese industrial history Australian Economic History Review Nov 2004 Vol 44 Issue 3 pp 241 258 Honeyman Katrina Doing Business with Gender Service Industries and British Business History Business History Review 2007 81 3 471 493 John Richard R Elaborations Revisions Dissents Alfred D Chander Jr s The Visible Hand after Twenty Years Business History Review 71 Summer 1997 151 200 online John Richard R Business historians and the challenge of innovation Business History Review 85 1 2011 185 201 online Johnman Lewis and Murphy Hugh Maritime and Business History in Britain Past Present and Future International Journal of Maritime History 2007 19 1 239 270 ISSN 0843 8714 Kirkland Edward C The Robber Barons Revisited The American Historical Review Vol 66 No 1 Oct 1960 pp 68 73 in JSTOR Klass Lance and Susan Kinnell Corporate America A Historical Bibliography 1984 Klein Maury Coming Full Circle the Study of Big Business since 1950 Enterprise amp Society the International Journal of Business History 2001 2 3 425 460 ISSN 1467 2227 Fulltext OUP Laird Pamela Walker How business historians can save the world from the fallacy of self made success Business History 59 8 2017 1201 1217 Larson Henrietta M Business History Retrospect and Prospect Bulletin of the Business Historical Society 1947 21 6 173 199 in Jstor McCarthy Dennis M International Business History A Contextual and Case Approach 1994 McElderry Andrea Lee Jane Kate Leonard and Robert Gardella Chinese Business History Interpretive Trends and Priorities for the Future 1998 Mordhorst Mads and Stefan Schwarzkopf Theorising narrative in business history Business History 59 8 2017 1155 1175 online Perchard Andrew et al Clio in the business school Historical approaches in strategy international business and entrepreneurship Business History 59 6 2017 904 927 online Perks Rob The roots of oral history exploring contrasting attitudes to elite corporate and business oral history in Britain and the US Oral History Review 37 2 2010 215 224 online Rollings Neil British Business History a Review of the Periodical Literature for 2005 Business History 2007 49 3 271 292 ISSN 0007 6791 Scranton Philip and Patrick Fridenson Reimagining Business History 2013 online review dead link Supple Barry Emmanuel Essays in British Business History 1977 Toms Steven and Wilson John F Scale Scope and Accountability Towards a New Paradigm of British Business History Business History 2003 45 4 1 23 ISSN 0007 6791 Tucker Kenneth Arthur Business History Selected Readings 1977 Special studies world Edit Bowen H V Business of Empire The East India Company and Imperial Britain 1756 1833 2006 304ppSpecial studies U S Edit Bailyn Bernard The New England Merchants in the Seventeenth Century 1955 Bursk Edward C et al eds The World Of Business Harvard Business School 4 vol 1962 2 700 pages of business insight memoirs history fiction amp analysis Cochran Thomas C The Pabst Brewing Company The History of an American Business 1948 Cole Arthur H The American Wool Manufacture 2 vol 1926 Dicke Thomas S Franchising in America The Development of a Business Method 1840 1980 1992 Doerflinger Thomas M A Vigorous Spirit of Enterprise Merchants and Economic Development in Revolutionary Philadelphia 1986 Friedman Walter A Birth of a Salesman The Transformation of Selling in America 2005 Friedman Walter A Fortune Tellers The Story of America s First Economic Forecasters 2013 Pak Susie J Gentlemen Bankers The World of J P Morgan 2013 Scranton Philip Proprietary Capitalism The Textile Manufacture at Philadelphia 1800 1885 1983 Scranton Philip Figured Tapestry Production Markets and Power in Philadelphia Textiles 1885 1941 1989 Tucker Barbara M Samuel Slater and the Origins of the American Textile Industry 1790 1860 1984 Weare Walter B Black Business in the New South A Social History of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company 1993 Wilkins Mira The Emergence of Multinational Enterprise 1970 Wilkins Mira The Maturing of Multinational Enterprise 1974 Wilkins Mira The History of Foreign Investment in the United States before 1914 1989 Wilkins Mira The History of Foreign Investment in the United States 1914 1945 2004 Williamson Harold F and Arnold R Daum The American Petroleum Industry The Age of Illumination 1859 1899 1959 vol 2 American Petroleum Industry the Age of Energy 1899 1959 1964 The standard history of the oil industry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Business history amp oldid 1122784237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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