Books on the topic 'Nineteenth-century banking'

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1

Bodenhorn, Howard. Free banking and bank entry in nineteenth-century new york. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2004.

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2

Ollerenshaw, Philip. Banking in nineteenth-century Ireland: The Belfast banks, 1825-1914. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1987.

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3

Banking in nineteenth-century Ireland: The Belfast banks, 1825-1914. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1987.

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4

Meissner, Christopher M. Committee structure and the success of connected lending in nineteenth century New England banks. Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2003.

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5

Bodenhorn, Howard. Usury ceilings, relationships, and bank lending behavior: Evidence from nineteenth century. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005.

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6

Bodenhorn, Howard. Usury ceilings, relationships and bank lending behavior: Evidence from nineteenth-century New York. Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005.

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7

White, Eugene Nelson. California banking in the nineteenth century: The art and method of the Bank of A. Levy. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1999.

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8

Ollerenshaw, Philip. Banking in nineteenth century Ireland : Belfast banks, 1825-1914. Manchester UP, 1989.

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9

Lu, Qian. From Partisan Banking to Open Access: The Emergence of Free Banking in Early Nineteenth Century Massachusetts. Palgrave Pivot, 2018.

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10

From Partisan Banking to Open Access: The Emergence of Free Banking in Early Nineteenth Century Massachusetts. Palgrave Pivot, 2017.

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11

The Rise of American Capitalism: The Growth of American Bank (America's Industrial Society in the Nineteenth Century.). Rosen Publishing Group, 2003.

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12

Blisse, Holger, and Detlev Hummel. Raiffeisenbanks and Volksbanks for Europe. Edited by Jonathan Michie, Joseph R. Blasi, and Carlo Borzaga. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684977.013.28.

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Co-operative banks have become an important part of the national banking systems in Europe since their creation as member-based organizations in the middle of the nineteenth century. They act together with their central institution(s) within a federal structure. Today, as a result of the crisis of financial markets, European regulation tends to prefer the type of a banking corporation. Co-operative banks, Volksbanks as well as Raiffeisenbanks, and their federal structure seem to be put under pressure to transform and to merge. As a result the number of banks (institutional diversity) and the diversity of banks’ legal forms decreases. This chapter recalls various phases of the history of the development of co-operative banks in Germany, concentrates on the switch from member-based to customer-oriented banks, and analyses strategies to reactivate a meaningful membership and to reposition these banks as responsible institutions for local and social problems.
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13

Wallace, Aurora. New Buildings and New Spaces. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037344.003.0003.

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This chapter views the New-York Tribune and the New York Times—the first in the industry to use skyscraper architecture as the medium for corporate image construction—in the context of the growing power of the press. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the city was reimagined with new patterns of circulation, spaces, conduits, and nodes of power. Alongside the growth of the banking and insurance industries, the press colonized lower Manhattan and the value of land rose precipitously. New construction and printing technology required capital investment and new forms of corporate governance. Media architecture transformed from rented space in low buildings to purpose-built signature buildings with lawyers, press agents, and advertising firms as tenants. The shift to taller buildings reveals a preoccupation with both the symbolic and economic value of the skyscraper, as media content became more attentive to the built environment.
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14

Moore, Robbie. Hotel Modernity. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474456654.001.0001.

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Hotel Modernity explores the impact of corporate space on the construction and texture of modern literature and film. It centres the hotel and corporate space as key sites of modern experience and culture. Examining architectural and financial records, hotel trade journals, travel journalism, advertisements and cinematic and literary representations, it charts the rise of hotel culture from 1870 to 1939. The book defines corporate space as the new urban, capital-intensive, large-scale spaces brought about by corporations during the nineteenth century, including department stores, railway stations and banking halls. Only in hotels, however, did the individual live within corporate space: sleeping in its beds and lounging in its parlours. The hotel structured intimate encounters with the impersonal and the anonymous, representing a radically new mode of experience. In chapters featuring readings of both canonical and relatively little-studied texts by Henry James, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Elizabeth Bowen, Arnold Bennett, and Henry Green, alongside films by F. W. Murnau, Segundo de Chomón, and Charlie Chaplin, Hotel Modernity considers the relationship between new kinds of spatial organisation and new forms of subjective and intersubjective life. Hotels provoked these writers and filmmakers to rethink the conventions and functions of fictional characters. This book charts the warping and decentring of the category of ‘character’ within the corporate, architectural, informatic and technological networks which come to define hotel space in this period.
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15

Coyne, Christopher J., and Peter Boettke, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Austrian Economics. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199811762.001.0001.

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The Oxford Handbook of Austrian Economics provides an overview of the main methodological, analytical, and practical implications of the Austrian school of economics. This intellectual tradition in economics and political economy has a long history that dates back to Carl Menger in the late nineteenth century. The various contributions discussed in this book all reflect this "tension" of an orthodox argumentative structure (rational choice and invisible hand) to address heterodox problem situations (uncertainty, differential knowledge, ceaseless change).The Austrian economists, from the founders to today, seek to derive the invisible-hand theorem from the rational-choice postulate via institutional analysis in a persistent and consistent manner. The Handbook, which consists of nine parts, and 34 chapters, covers a variety of topics including: methodology, microeconomics (market process theory and spontaneous order), macroeconomics (capital theory and Austrian business cycle theory, and free banking), institutions and organizational theory, political economy, development and social change, and the 2008 financial crisis. The goals of the volume are twofold. First, to introduce readers to some of the main theories and insights of the Austrian school. Second, to demonstrate how Austrian economics provides a set of tools for making original and novel scholarly contributions to the broader economics discipline. By providing insight into the central Austrian theories, the volume will be valuable to those who are unfamiliar with Austrian economics. At the same time, it will be appealing to those already familiar with Austrian economics, given its emphasis on Austrian economics as a live and progressive research program in the social sciences.
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