Australian Economic History Review

Papers
(The TQCC of Australian Economic History Review is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-04-01 to 2024-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
Forced displacement in history: Some recent research18
Dry bulk shipping and the evolution of maritime transport costs, 1850–20208
Return Migration from Nineteenth Century Australia: Key Drivers and Gender Differences5
Commodity boom‐bust cycles and the resource curse in Australia: 1900 to 20074
The state in Chinese economic history3
Research in business history: From theorising to bizhismetrics3
Emigration from the United Kingdom to the United States, Canada and Australia/New Zealand, 1870–1913: Quantity and quality3
Estimating Long‐Run Incarceration Rates for Australia, Canada, England and Wales, New Zealand, and the United States2
Big Economic History2
Why geography matters to the economic history of India2
Above board? Interlocking directorates and corporate contagion in 1980s Australia2
Revisiting the tariff‐growth correlation: The Australasian colonies, 1866–19002
Always egalitarian? Australian earnings inequality 1870–19102
The legacy of colonial rule: On the impact of the railway zones in modern China2
Smallholder Involvement in Tree Crops in Malaya, with Special Reference to Oil and Coconut Palms in Johor, 1862–19631
Determining the reasons for the failure of British aircraft manufacturers to invest in Australia's industry, 1934–19411
Globalisation, migration, trade and growth: Honouring the contribution of Jeff Williamson to Australian andAsia‐Pacificeconomic history—Guest Editor's introduction1
Unleash the Pandora's Box: Political Turmoil and Malaria Outbreak During China's Cultural Revolution1
Agricultural development in industrialising Japan, 1880–19401
Institutional dynamics and access to non‐farm employment in rural China, 1950–19961
Reflections on the Business History Tradition: Where has it Come from and Where is it Going to?1
The Siamese rice trade during the interwar years: Trade pattern, crisis and business survival1
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