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1

Lokshin, Michael. Short-lived shocks with long-lived impacts?: Household income dynamics in a transition economy / Michael Lokshin and Martin Ravallion. Washington, DC: World Bank, Development Research Group, Poverty and Human Resources, 2000.

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2

Economic lives: How culture shapes the economy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011.

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3

Banerjee, Abhijit V. The economic lives of the poor. Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, 2006.

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4

Jennifer, Vogel, ed. Crapped out: How gambling ruins the economy and destroys lives. Monroe, Me: Common Courage Press, 1997.

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5

Nish, Ian. The History of Manchuria, 1840-1948. GB Folkestone: Amsterdam University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9781898823421.

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In A History of Manchuria, Ian Nish describes the turbulent times which the three Northeastern Provinces of China experienced in the last two centuries. The site of three serious wars in 1894, 1904 and 1919, the territory rarely enjoyed peace though its economy progressed because of the building of arterial railways. From 1932 it came under the rule of the Japanese-inspired government of Manchukuo based at Changchun. But that was short-lived, being brought to an end by the punitive incursion and occupation of the country by Soviet forces in 1945. Thereafter the devastated territory was fought over by Chinese Nationalist and Communist armies until Mukden (Shenyang) fell to the Communists in October 1948. Manchuria, under-populated but strategically important, was the location for disputes between China, Russia and Japan, the three powers making up the 'triangle' which gives the name to the sub-title of this study. These countries were hardly ever at peace with one another, the result being that the economic growth of a potentially wealthy country was seriously retarded. The story is illustrated by extracts drawn from contemporary documents of the three triangular powers.
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6

Banz, Kurt. Die Sozioökonomie der chronischen Lebererkrankungen in Deutschland. Bern: P. Lang, 1993.

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7

The entertainment economy: How mega-media forces are transforming our lives. New York: Times Books, 1999.

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8

The everyday politics of labour: Working lives in India's informal economy. Delhi: Social Science Press, 2005.

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9

Wolf, Michael J. The entertainment economy: How mega-media forces are transforming our lives. New York: Three Rivers Press, 1999.

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10

"Live to steal and steal to live": Juveniles and economic crime. Papua New Guinea: Political & Legal Studies Division, National Research Institute, 1997.

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11

Salisbury, Philip S. CHANGES IN LIVE BIRTHS AND ECONOMIC IMPACT. Springfield, IL: Economic and Population Trends, 2007.

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12

Grossman, Gene M. Intergenerational redistribution with short-lived governments. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1996.

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13

Grossman, Gene M. Intergenerational redistribution with short-lived governments. London: Centre for Economic Policy Research, 1996.

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14

Live from Dar es Salaam: Popular music and Tanzania's music economy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2011.

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15

Peoplenomics: How the rise of the social economy will transform our lives. New York, NY: Free Press, 2013.

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16

Goldblatt, Eli, John Duffy, Julie Nelson Christoph, Rebecca S. Nowacek, Nelson Graff, and Bryan Trabold. Literacy, economy, and power: Writing and research after Literacy in American Lives. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2014.

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17

Blau, Francine D. Women's work, women's lives: A comparative economic perspective. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1990.

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18

Ravallion, Martin, and Michael Lokshin. Short-Lived Shocks with Long-Lived Impacts? Household Income Dynamics in a Transition Economy. The World Bank, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-2459.

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19

Derr, Jennifer. Lived Nile: Environment, Disease, and Material Colonial Economy in Egypt. Stanford University Press, 2019.

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20

Lived Nile: Environment, Disease, and Material Colonial Economy in Egypt. Stanford University Press, 2019.

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21

Russell-Smith, Jeremy, Peter Whitehead, and Peter Cooke, eds. Culture, Ecology and Economy of Fire Management in North Australian Savannas. CSIRO Publishing, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643098299.

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This engaging volume explores the management of fire in one of the world’s most flammable landscapes: Australia’s tropical savannas, where on average 18% of the landscape is burned annually. Impacts have been particularly severe in the Arnhem Land Plateau, a centre of plant and animal diversity on Indigenous land. Culture, Ecology and Economy of Fire Management in North Australian Savannas documents a remarkable collaboration between Arnhem Land’s traditional landowners and the scientific community to arrest a potentially catastrophic fire-driven decline in the natural and cultural assets of the region – not by excluding fire, but by using it better through restoration of Indigenous control over burning. This multi-disciplinary treatment encompasses the history of fire use in the savannas, the post-settlement changes that altered fire patterns, the personal histories of a small number of people who lived most of their lives on the plateau and, critically, their deep knowledge of fire and how to apply it to care for country. Uniquely, it shows how such knowledge and commitment can be deployed in conjunction with rigorous formal scientific analysis, advanced technology, new cross-cultural institutions and the emerging carbon economy to build partnerships for controlling fire at scales that were, until this demonstration, thought beyond effective intervention.
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22

Anderson, Elizabeth. The Problem of Equality from a Political Economy Perspective. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198801221.003.0003.

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This paper explores challenges to the creation of an egalitarian society from what we know about different types of human society across human history. All human beings originally lived in hunter-gatherer bands, which, along with tribal societies, are remarkably egalitarian. Inegalitarian social forms—rank societies and social stratification—are rooted in the following causes: (1) despotic tendencies rooted in human psychology; (2) esteem competition; (3) descent group closure and ingroup opportunity hoarding; (4) inegalitarian ideology; and (5) the increasing scale of societies, administration of which requires layers of hierarchically organized bureaucracy. Large-scale social organization can deliver dramatically reduced interpersonal violence and increased prosperity and opportunities. Securing the benefits of scale without oppressive social hierarchy requires the institution of checks and norms against bullies and narcissists, reworking the economy of esteem, ending descent group opportunity hoarding, integrating social groups, promoting egalitarian ideologies, and perfecting democratic practices.
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23

Economic Lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy. Princeton University Press, 2010.

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24

Zelizer, Viviana A. Economic Lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy. Princeton University Press, 2010.

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25

Economic Lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy. Princeton University Press, 2013.

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26

Horn, Jeff. Lasting Economic Structures. Edited by David Andress. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199639748.013.035.

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The economic history of the French Revolution has been largely neglected for decades. Those historians interested in the economy have been strongly influenced by the ‘cultural turn’, relying heavily on the tools of intellectual history. These studies avoid the investigation of the economic impact of the ‘threat from below’ and revolutionary political economy. The decade 1789–99 provides opportunities to demonstrate the limited opportunities and flawed implementation of the strictures of both liberal economics and a command economy. To do justice to the historical record, analysts should situate their work in the specificities of revolutionary economic practice. A firm grounding in the lived experience of production and consumption is necessary to understand the role of the economy in the twists and turns of the Revolution as well as its complex legacy in the nineteenth century, in particular, the delayed onset of industrialization and the rise of the notables to power.
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27

Langellotti, Micaela. Village Life in Roman Egypt. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198835318.001.0001.

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This book is the first detailed study of a village in the Roman Empire, Tebtunis, in Egypt, in the first century AD. It is based on the evidence of the archive of the local notarial office (grapheion), which was run by a man named Kronion for most of the mid-first century. The archive as a whole, unparallelled in antiquity, includes over 200 documents written on papyrus and attests to a wide range of transactions made by the villagers over well-defined periods of time, in particular the years AD 42 and 45–7 during the reign of the emperor Claudius. This evidence gives us a unique insight into various aspects of village life, such as the level of participation in the written contractual economy; the socio-economic stratification of the village, including the position of women, slaves, and priests, and the role of the elite; the functions of associations; the types and importance of agriculture and non-agricultural activities. This book argues for a highly diversified village economy, wide involvement in written transactions among all strata of the population, and a rural society that generally lived above subsistence level. It provides a model of village society that can be used for understanding the large majority of the population within the Roman empire who lived outside cities in the Mediterranean, particularly in the other eastern and more Hellenized provinces.
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28

Bald, Vivek. Selling the East in the American South. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037832.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the complex racializations and negotiations of South Asian sailors who jumped ship in Southern and Northeastern seaports and became entrepreneurs who traded ethnic notions within the larger cultural economy of Orientalism of the time. This early history expands the South Asian American narrative to include a group of previously unknown migrants who lived and worked in the United States as early as the 1880s. It points to the significance of the cultural and economic context of turn-of-the-century American Orientalism within which they were able to establish a viable commercial network. Moreover, it reveals different trajectories of migration from the subcontinent—trajectories that South Asians followed through the Southern states and into the economic and cultural orbit of the Caribbean and Central America.
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29

Berry, Daina Ramey, and Nakia D. Parker. Women and Slavery in the Nineteenth Century. Edited by Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor and Lisa G. Materson. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190222628.013.9.

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This chapter analyzes the lives of enslaved women in the nineteenth-century United States and the Caribbean, an era characterized by the massive expansion of the institution of chattel slavery. Framing the discussion through the themes of labor, commodification, sexuality, and resistance, this chapter highlights the wide range of lived experiences of enslaved women in the Atlantic World. Enslaved women’s productive and reproductive labor fueled the global machinery of capitalism and the market economy. Although enslaved women endured the constant exploitation and commodification of their bodies, many actively resisted their enslavement and carved out supportive and sustaining familial, marital, and kinship bonds. In addition, this essay explains how white, native, and black women could be complicit in the perpetuation of chattel slavery as enslavers and slave traders. Considering women in their roles as the oppressed and the oppressors contributes and expands historical understandings of gender and sexuality in relation to slavery.
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30

Penny, Duggan, and Dashner Heather, eds. Women's lives in the new global economy. Amsterdam: International Institute for Research and Education, 1994.

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31

EMPSON. Subjective Lives Economic Transformati. UCL Press, 2020.

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32

EMPSON. Subjective Lives Economic Transformati. UCL Press, 2020.

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33

Graber, Jennifer. 1868 to 1872. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190279615.003.0004.

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As the federal government established reservations across the American West, Protestant leaders argued that they were best suited to run them. Quakers, especially, claimed that America’s benevolent character could be best expressed by turning reservations over to Protestant representatives. By the early 1870s, Protestant and Catholic representatives administered dozens of reservations in what came to be known as the “Peace Policy.” Kiowas, now living on a reservation, found ways to continue their cultural practices despite the reservation’s limits and its Quaker administration. They lived nomadically, hunted for their food, and participated in a broad regional economy for buffalo hides and other trade goods. They also carried out their rites for seeking sacred power. But Quakers pushed them to farm, attend school, and remain inside reservation boundaries. And federal officials withheld food rations and incarcerated Kiowas who broke reservation regulations. Tensions grew between Kiowas and the Quakers who lived among them.
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34

Martin, Paul, Stevienna de Saille, Kirsty Liddiard, and Warren Pearce, eds. Being Human During COVID-19. Bristol University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.47674/9781529223149.

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The digital pdf version of Chapter 12 is available Open Access under CC-BY licence. This transdisciplinary collection engages with key issues of social exclusion, inequality, power and knowledge in the context of COVID-19. Putting the spotlight on the lived experiences of marginalised groups from around the world, the authors reframe ongoing debates around the pandemic and highlight how they might lead to new ways of thinking and acting in relation to public policy, culture and the economy. .
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35

Corr, Rachel. Interwoven: Andean Lives in Colonial Ecuador's Textile Economy. University of Arizona Press, 2018.

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36

Corr, Rachel. Interwoven: Andean Lives in Colonial Ecuador's Textile Economy. University of Arizona Press, 2018.

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37

Hocker, Fred. Postmedieval Ships and Seafaring in the West. Edited by Ben Ford, Donny L. Hamilton, and Alexis Catsambis. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199336005.013.0020.

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Postmedieval maritime archaeology is focused more on naval ships than classical or medieval maritime archaeology. Merchant ship archaeology lived for many years in the shadow of naval ships. Ships and seafaring were an essential part of that growth and expansion, connecting remote parts of the world in a global economy. The period after 1400 is characterized by growth and bureaucratization in most of Europe. There were major developments in ship construction after 1400. In the Mediterranean, frame-based design and construction methods reached a stage of sophisticated geometrical precision. Mediterranean techniques began to be adopted along the Atlantic coast. The demographic and economic recovery of the fifteenth century and the globalization of seafaring lead to the use of a wider range of ship sizes. Privateering was a profitable enterprise in wartime. The growth of maritime archaeology was tied directly to popular cultural interest in perceived high points in national histories.
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38

Grabe, Shelly. Transnational Feminism in Psychology: Women’s Human Rights, Liberation, and Social Justice. Edited by Phillip L. Hammack. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199938735.013.20.

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The paradigm of transnational feminism emerged in response to the economic and social dislocation that has disproportionately exacerbated women’s rights violations since the neoliberal restructuring of the global economy in the 1980s and 1990s. This chapter proposes that to have a better understanding of women’s rights and justice, contributions from a social justice-oriented psychology that integrates feminist scholarship and empirical findings based on women’s grassroots resistance and activism are necessary. It proposes a transnational feminist liberation psychology whereby researchers (1) work from the grassroots by fostering meaningful alliances with others working outside the academy in a joint pursuit of liberation, (2) use methodology that investigates sites of resistance, bringing visibility to a fuller spectrum of women’s lived experience, and (3) recognize how dimensions of power and inequality impact research. Given the persistent violations of women’s rights globally, it is imperative to understand the psychosocial conditions that lead to justice.
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39

Finley, Alexandra J. An Intimate Economy. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469661353.001.0001.

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Alexandra Finley adds crucial new dimensions to the boisterous debate over the relationship between slavery and capitalism by placing women's labor at the center of the antebellum slave trade, focusing particularly on slave traders' ability to profit from enslaved women's domestic, reproductive, and sexual labor. The slave market infiltrated every aspect of southern society, including the most personal spaces of the household, the body, and the self. Finley shows how women’s work was necessary to the functioning of the slave trade, and thus to the spread of slavery to the Lower South, the expansion of cotton production, and the profits accompanying both of these markets. Through the personal histories of four enslaved women, Finley explores the intangible costs of the slave market, moving beyond ledgers, bills of sales, and statements of profit and loss to consider the often incalculable but nevertheless invaluable place of women's emotional, sexual, and domestic labor in the economy. The details of these women's lives reveal the complex intersections of economy, race, and family at the heart of antebellum society.
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40

Bussel, Robert. Epilogue. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039492.003.0013.

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This epilogue reflects on the legacy of Harold Gibbons and Ernest Calloway. It begins with a discussion of some valuable insights that the two men's experience provides. As far back as the 1960s, Gibbons and Calloway lamented the stagnation of union organizing amid structural changes in the economy that were diluting labor's strength. They thought creatively about how the Teamsters could exercise decisive economic leverage, and their concept of treating workers as total persons might find new political resonance in tackling the work–family divide that has arisen as dual earner families have become a social norm. The epilogue also considers several sobering aspects of Gibbons and Calloway's careers, including the short-lived successes of total person unionism as well as its limited reach, both within St. Louis and elsewhere. Finally, it suggests that Gibbons and Calloway's most powerful legacy was their insistence on the essential interrelationships between work, citizenship, and democracy.
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41

Rose, Susan. The Medieval Sea. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350932852.

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This book provides an accessible study of how peoples bordering the Mediterranean, North Sea, English Channel and eastern Atlantic related to the sea in all its aspects. This book surveys how the peoples bordering the Mediterranean, North Sea, English Channel and eastern Atlantic related to the sea in all its aspects between approximately 1000-1500 A.D.How was the sea represented in poems and other writings? What kinds of boats were used and how were they built? How easy was it to navigate on short or long passages? Was seaborne trade crucial to the economy of this area? Did naval warfare loom large in the minds of medieval rulers? What can be said more generally about the lives of those who went to sea or who lived by its shores? These are the major questions which are addressed in this book, which is based on extensive research in both maritime archives and also in secondary literature. It concludes by pointing out how the relatively enclosed maritime world of Western Europe was radically changed by the voyages of the late fifteenth century across the Atlantic to the Caribbean and round Africa to India.
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42

Diner, Hasia R., ed. The Oxford Handbook of the Jewish Diaspora. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190240943.001.0001.

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The reality of diaspora has shaped Jewish history, its demography, its economic relationships, and the politics that impacted the lives of Jews with each other and with the non-Jews among whom they lived. Jews have moved around the globe since the beginning of their history, maintaining relationships with their former Jewish neighbors, who had chosen other destinations and at the same time forging relationships in their new homes with Jews from widely different places of origin.
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43

Christiaens, Tim. Digital Working Lives: Worker Autonomy and the Gig Economy. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2022.

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44

Cordero-Guzmán, Héctor R. Afterword. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037573.003.0016.

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This afterword summarizes the issues addressed by the book regarding the current condition and position of immigrant women in the U.S. economy. It highlights several of the book's significant contributions that set it apart from other works in the fields of gender, migration, and low-wage work. Drawing on a number of case studies, the book has explored the lived experiences of low-wage immigrant women and the ways in which they have been impacted by neoliberal globalization, flexibilization, and informality. It has investigated the emerging sectors of the informal economy and their increasingly intricate connection to the formal economy and the personal services sector, as well as the changing nature, character, and role of evolving ethnic enclaves in both providing opportunities for low-wage women and allowing exploitation, marginalization, and abuse to become rampant and intolerable for the workers. This afterword discusses some concrete implications of the book's findings for research on and policies regarding low-wage women and work.
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45

Hall, Sarah Marie, Horton John, and Helena Pimlott-Wilson. Austerity Across Europe: Lived Experiences of Economic Crises. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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46

Hall, Sarah Marie, John Horton, and Helena Pimlott-Wilson. Austerity Across Europe: Lived Experiences of Economic Crises. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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47

Hall, Sarah Marie, John Horton, and Helena Pimlott-Wilson. Austerity Across Europe: Lived Experiences of Economic Crises. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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48

Austerity Across Europe: Lived Experiences of Economic Crises. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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49

Hall, Sarah Marie, Horton John, and Helena Pimlott-Wilson. Austerity Across Europe: Lived Experiences of Economic Crises. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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50

Austerity: The Lived Experience. University of Toronto Press, 2017.

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