JOINT CENTER
12 January 2022
Diana Kim (IAS/Georgetown University)
Colonial States and their Legacies across Southeast Asia: Through the Lens of Japan's Wartime Empire
BARRIERS AND BORDERS
20 January 2022
Noora Lori (Boston University) and
Robtel Neajai Pailey (London School of Economics)
Creating Barriers: Migration, Citizenship, and the Politics of Inclusion & Exclusion
LAW AND SOCIETY IN HISTORY
28 January 2022
Jatin Dua (University of Michigan) and
Nicholas W. Stephenson Smith (Northwestern)
Maritime Borderlands, Conflict, and the Law
David K. Richards (1939-2015) was a friend and adviser to the Joint Center for History and Economics, at Cambridge and at Harvard, over many years. He was a participant in Center events, a wonderful observer of economic history, and, with Carol Richards, an immensely generous supporter of the Center's work. One of the many interviews with him, in Barron's, began, "Of all the people we interview, David Richards strikes the deepest chord with readers. His interviews seem to be the ones that get tacked to walls or saved in a desk drawer, treasures of insight and wisdom." We miss him greatly.
The Joint Center for History and Economics is based at Harvard University and at Magdalene College and King's College, University of Cambridge. It was established at Harvard in 2007 to promote research and education on subjects of importance for historians and economists, including the history of economic thought, economic history, and the application of economic concepts to historical problems. The objective of the Center is to encourage fundamental research in history, economics, and related disciplines. It also encourages the participation of historians and economists in addressing issues of public importance.
The Center is supported by a generous gift from the David K. and Carol Richards Fund. In conjunction with its counterpart Centre at the University of Cambridge, the Harvard Center undertakes research projects and organizes workshops, seminars and exchanges of undergraduate and graduate students. It provides the base for current research projects on Exchanges of Economic, Legal and Political Ideas, on Energy History, and on Visualizing Historical Networks, as well as for the History Project and the Prize Fellowship Program in Economics, History and Politics.
Slave Empire: How Slavery Built Modern Britain
Unsound Empire: Civilization and Madness in Late-Victorian Law
Real Estate and Global Urban History
An Infinite History: The Story of a Family in France over Three Centuries Center for History and Economics, 1730 Cambridge Street, S-422, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
histecon@fas.harvard.edu | Tel. +1 617 495 4001
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