[1]
Aldcroft, D.H. 1964. The Entrepreneur and the British Economy, 1870-1914. The Economic History Review. 17, 1 (1964). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2592694.
[2]
Aldcroft, D.H. 1964. The Entrepreneur and the British Economy, 1870-1914. The Economic History Review. 17, 1 (1964). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2592694.
[3]
Allan Drazen and Vittorio Grilli 1993. The Benefit of Crises for Economic Reforms. The American Economic Review. 83, 3 (1993), 598–607.
[4]
Allen, FranklinGale, Douglas 2000. Bubbles and crises. Economic Journal. 110, 460 (2000).
[5]
ALLEN, R.C. 2011. Why the industrial revolution was British: commerce, induced invention, and the scientific revolution1. The Economic History Review. 64, 2 (May 2011), 357–384. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00532.x.
[6]
ALLEN, R.C. and WEISDORF, J.L. 2011. Was there an ‘industrious revolution’ before the industrial revolution? An empirical exercise for England, c. 1300-1830. The Economic History Review. 64, 3 (Aug. 2011), 715–729. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00566.x.
[7]
Amatori, Franco Chapter 3 - Entrepreneurship. Business History. 20–28.
[8]
Andrew Porter 1988. The Balance Sheet of Empire, 1850-1914. The Historical Journal. 31, 3 (1988), 685–699.
[9]
Appadurai, A. and Ethnohistory Workshop 1986. Introduction: Commodities and the Politics of Value. The Social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. Cambridge University Press. 3–63.
[10]
Atack, J. and Neal, L. 2009. Chapter 1, Financial Innovations and Crises: The View Backwards From Northern Rock. The origins and development of financial markets and institutions: from the seventeenth century to the present. Cambridge University Press. 1–31.
[11]
Austin, G. Capitalism and the Colonies. The Cambridge History of Capitalism. Cambridge University Press. 301–347.
[12]
Barrett, W. 1990. World Bullion Flows’, 1450-1800. The rise of merchant empires: long-distance trade in the early modern world, 1350-1750. Cambridge University Press. 224–254.
[13]
Ben-Porath, Y. 1980. The F-Connection: Families, Friends, and Firms and the Organization of Exchange. Population and Development Review. 6, 1 (Mar. 1980). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1972655.
[14]
Berg, M. and Hudson, P. 1992. Rehabilitating the Industrial Revolution. The Economic History Review. 45, 1 (Feb. 1992). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2598327.
[15]
Billings, M. and Capie, F. 2011. Financial crisis, contagion, and the British banking system between the world wars. Business History. 53, 2 (Apr. 2011), 193–215. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2011.555105.
[16]
Black, J. et al. 2009. A Dictionary of Economics. Oxford University Press.
[17]
Bowen, H.V. 2002. "No Longer Mere Traders”: Continuities and Change in the Metropolitan Development of the East India Company, 1600-1834, from:The worlds of the East India Company. The worlds of the East India Company. Boydell Press. 19–32.
[18]
Boyns, Trevor Edwards, John Richard1 The Construction of Cost Accounting Systems in Britain to 1900: The Case of the  Coal, Iron, and Steel Industries. Business History. 39, 3, 1–29.
[19]
Branson, R. 2017. Finding My Virginity. Virgin books.
[20]
Braudel, F. 1982. Civilization and Capitalism 15th-18th Century: Vol 2: The Wheels of Commerce. Collins.
[21]
Braudel, F. 1982. Civilization and capitalism, 15th-18th century: Vol 2: The Wheels of Commerce. Collins.
[22]
Buchnea, E. 2014. Transatlantic Transformations: Visualizing Change Over Time in the Liverpool–New York Trade Network, 1763–1833. Enterprise and Society. 15, 04 (Dec. 2014), 687–721. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S1467222700016086.
[23]
Burk, K. 1992. Chapter 19, Money and Power: The Shift from Great Britain to the United States. Finance and financiers in European history, 1880-1960. Cambridge University Press. 359–369.
[24]
Burnard, T.G. and Garrigus, J.D. 2016. The plantation machine: Atlantic capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica. University of Pennsylvania Press.
[25]
Cain, P.J. and Hopkins, A.G. 1986. Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas I. The Old Colonial System, 1688-1850. The Economic History Review. 39, 4 (Nov. 1986). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2596481.
[26]
Cain, P.J. and Hopkins, A.G. 1987. Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas II: New Imperialism, 1850-1945. The Economic History Review. 40, 1 (Feb. 1987). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2596293.
[27]
Carlos, A.M. and Kruse, J.B. 1996. The Decline of the Royal African Company: Fringe Firms and the Role of the Charter. The Economic History Review. 49, 2 (May 1996). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2597917.
[28]
Carlos, Ann MLewis, Frank D Marketing in the land of Hudson Bay: Indian consumers and the Hudson Bay Company, 1670-1770. Enterprise & Society. 3, 2, 285–317.
[29]
Cassis, Y. and Collier, J. 2006. Capitals of capital: a history of international financial centres, 1780-2005. Cambridge University Press.
[30]
Casson, M. 2010. Entrepreneurship: theory, networks, history. Edward Elgar.
[31]
Casson, M. and Casson, C. 2014. The history of entrepreneurship: Medieval origins of a modern phenomenon. Business History. 56, 8 (Nov. 2014), 1223–1242. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2013.867330.
[32]
Casson, Mark Chapter 2 - Basic Concepts of the Theory. Entrepreneur, The: An Economic Theory. 19–33.
[33]
Catherine Molineux 2007. Pleasures of the Smoke: ‘Black Virginians’ in Georgian London’s Tobacco Shops. The William and Mary Quarterly. 64, 2 (2007), 327–376.
[34]
Cerni, P. 2007. The Age of Consumer Capitalism.
[35]
Chapman, S.D. 1992. Merchant enterprise in Britain: from the Industrial Revolution to World War I. Cambridge University Press.
[36]
Cloke, P.J. et al. 2014. Glossary. Introducing human geographies. Routledge. 919–944.
[37]
Crafts, N. 1994. The Industrial Revolution. The economic history of Britain since 1700, Vol. II, 1700-1860. Cambridge University Press. 44–59.
[38]
Crafts, N.F.R. 1983. British Economic Growth, 1700-1831: A Review of the Evidence. The Economic History Review. 36, 2 (May 1983). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2595919.
[39]
Crewe, Louise Geographies of retailing and consumption: markets in motion. Progress in Human Geography. 27, 3, 352–362.
[40]
Crumplin, T.E. 2007. Opaque Networks: Business and community in the Isle of Man, 1840–1900. Business History. 49, 6 (Nov. 2007), 780–801. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076790701710233.
[41]
Darwin, J. 2009. Introduction. The empire project: the rise and fall of the British world-system, 1830-1970. Cambridge University Press. 15–34.
[42]
David Greasley and Les Oxley 1997. Endogenous Growth or ‘Big Bang’: Two Views of the First Industrial Revolution. The Journal of Economic History. 57, 4 (1997), 935–949.
[43]
Dean, G. et al. 2016. Pacioli’s double entry – part of an intellectual and social movement. Accounting History Review. 26, 1 (Jan. 2016), 5–24. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/21552851.2015.1129083.
[44]
Dennis O. Flynn and Arturo Giráldez 2002. Cycles of Silver: Global Economic Unity through the Mid-Eighteenth Century. Journal of World History. 13, 2 (2002), 391–427.
[45]
Derks, H. 2008. Religion, capitalism and the rise of double-entry bookkeeping. Accounting, Business & Financial History. 18, 2 (Jul. 2008), 187–213. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09585200802058735.
[46]
DI MARTINO, P. 2012. Legal institutions, social norms, and entrepreneurship in Britain (c.1890-c.1939)1. The Economic History Review. 65, 1 (Feb. 2012), 120–143. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00601.x.
[47]
Dickson, P.G.M. 1967. Chapter 1 - The South Sea Bubble I. The financial revolution in England: a study in the development of public credit : 1688-1756. Macmillan.
[48]
Dickson, P.G.M. 1967. Chapter 1, The Financial Revolution. The financial revolution in England: a study in the development of public credit : 1688-1756. Macmillan. 3–14.
[49]
Dickson, P.G.M. 1967. Chapter 6 - The South Sea Bubble II. The financial revolution in England: a study in the development of public credit : 1688-1756. Macmillan.
[50]
Dimmock, S. 2014. The Origin of Capitalism in England, 1400-1600. BRILL.
[51]
Draper, N. 2014. Chapter 3, Helping to Make Britain Great: The Commercial Legacies of Slave-Ownership in Britain. Legacies of British slave-ownership: colonial slavery and the formation of Victorian Britain. Cambridge University Press. 78–126.
[52]
Edwards, J.R. et al. 2002. British central government and "the mercantile system of double entry” bookkeeping: a study of ideological conflict. Accounting, Organizations and Society. 27, 7 (Oct. 2002), 637–658. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0361-3682(01)00060-5.
[53]
Edwards, J.R. et al. 2009. Merchants’ accounts, performance assessment and decision making in mercantilist Britain. Accounting, Organizations and Society. 34, 5 (Jul. 2009), 551–570. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aos.2008.09.001.
[54]
EHS Teaching Podcasts: The South Sea Bubble of 1720: a famous financial crash - Economic History Society: http://www.ehs.org.uk/multimedia/ehs-teaching-podcasts-the-south-sea-bubble-of-1720-a-famous-financial-crash.
[55]
Elbaum, B. and Lazonick, W. 1986. An Institutional Perspective on British Decline. The decline of the British economy. Clarendon Press. 1–17.
[56]
Elbaum, B. and Lazonick, W. 1986. The State and Economic Decline. The decline of the British economy. Clarendon Press. 266–302.
[57]
Erikson, E. and Bearman, P. 2006. Malfeasance and the Foundations for Global Trade: The Structure of English Trade in the East Indies, 1601–1833. American Journal of Sociology. 112, 1 (Jul. 2006), 195–230. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/502694.
[58]
FLEISCHMAN, R.K. et al. 2011. Plantation accounting and management practices in the US and the British West Indies at the end of their slavery eras1. The Economic History Review. 64, 3 (Aug. 2011), 765–797. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00548.x.
[59]
Forestier, A. 2010. Risk, kinship and personal relationships in late eighteenth-century West Indian trade: The commercial network of Tobin & Pinney. Business History. 52, 6 (Oct. 2010), 912–931. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2010.511182.
[60]
Gallagher, J. and Robinson, R. 1953. The Imperialism of Free Trade. The Economic History Review. 6, 1 (1953). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2591017.
[61]
Gladwell, M. 1997. Annals of style: the coolhunt. New Yorker. 17 March (1997), 78–87.
[62]
Goodman, J. 1995. Chapter 6, Excitantia: Or; How Enlightenment Europe Took to Soft Drugs. Consuming habits: drugs in history and anthropology. Routledge. 126–141.
[63]
Goodman, J. 1993. Chapter 9 - ”To Live by Smoke”: Tobacco is big Business. Tobacco in history: the cultures of dependence. Routledge. 216–238.
[64]
Goss, J. 2013. Consumption Geographies. Introducing human geographies. Routledge. 253–271.
[65]
Gregory Clark and Ysbrand Van Der Werf 1998. Work in Progress? The Industrious Revolution. The Journal of Economic History. 58, 3 (1998), 830–843.
[66]
Gregson, N. 2003. Chapter 1, Introduction. Second-hand cultures. Berg. 1–16.
[67]
Griffiths, P.J. 1974. A licence to trade: the history of English chartered companies. E. Benn.
[68]
Grossman, H. 2017. Capitalism’s contradictions: studies of economic thought before and after Marx. Haymarket books.
[69]
Haggerty, S. 2017. Actors of Maritime Trade in the British Atlantic: From the ‘sea dogs’ to a Trading Empire. The sea in history =: La mer dans l’histoire. The Boydell Press. 350–359.
[70]
Haggerty, S. 2012. Chapter 6- Networks, from: ‘Merely for money’?: business culture in the British Atlantic, 1750-1815. ‘Merely for money’?: business culture in the British Atlantic, 1750-1815. Liverpool University Press. 161–197.
[71]
Haggerty, S. 2012. Chapter 7 - Crises. ‘Merely for money’?: business culture in the British Atlantic, 1750-1815. Liverpool University Press. 198–234.
[72]
Haggerty, S. 2011. I could "do for the Dickmans”: When Networks Don’t Work. Cosmopolitan networks in commerce and society, 1660-1914. German Historical Institute. 317–342.
[73]
Hamilton, D. et al. 2005. Chapter 4 - Mercantile Connections. Scotland, the Caribbean and the Atlantic World, 1750-1820. Manchester University Press. 84–111.
[74]
Harley, C. 2003. Chapter 7, Trade : Discovery mercantilism and technology, from: The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain, Vol. 1. Industrialisation, 1700-1860. The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain. Vol. 1 Industrialisation, 1700-1860. Cambridge University Press. 175–203.
[75]
Hemmo, M. et al. 2014. The Cambridge history of capitalism / edited by Larry Neal and Jeffrey G. Williamson. Cambridge University Press.
[76]
Hoppit, J. 1990. Counting the Industrial Revolution. The Economic History Review. 43, 2 (May 1990). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2596785.
[77]
Hoppit, J. 2002. THE MYTHS OF THE SOUTH SEA BUBBLE. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 12, (Dec. 2002), 141–165. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0080440102000051.
[78]
Hudson, P. 1992. The industrial revolution. Arnold.
[79]
Humphries, J. 2010. Childhood and child labour and the British industrial revolution. Cambridge University Press.
[80]
Inikori, J. 2002. Chapter 9 - Atlantic Markets and the Development of the Major Manufacturing Sectors in England’s Industrialization, from: Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England. Africans and the industrial revolution in England: a study in international trade and economic development. Cambridge University Press. 427–451.
[81]
Jan De Vries 1994. The Industrial Revolution and the Industrious Revolution. The Journal of Economic History. 54, 2 (1994), 249–270.
[82]
JAN DE VRIES 2010. The limits of globalization in the early modern world. The Economic History Review. 63, 3 (2010), 710–733.
[83]
Jeffrey G. Williamson 1984. Why Was British Growth So Slow During the Industrial Revolution? The Journal of Economic History. 44, 3 (1984), 687–712.
[84]
John  Richard  Edwards Accounting education in Britain during the early modern period. Accounting History Review. 21, 1, 37–67.
[85]
Jones, G. and Zeitlin, J. 2007. Chapter 21, Entrepreneurship. The Oxford handbook of business history. Oxford University Press. 501–528.
[86]
Jones, M.J. 2009. Origins of medieval Exchequer accounting. Accounting, Business & Financial History. 19, 3 (Nov. 2009), 259–285. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09585200802667147.
[87]
Kaye, J. 1998. Chapter 1 - The Economic Background: Monetization and Monetary Consciousness in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries  Economy and Nature in the Fourteenth Century : Money, Market Exchange, and the Emergence of Scientific Thought. Economy and nature in the fourteenth century: money, market exchange, and the emergence of scientific thought. Cambridge University Press. 15–36.
[88]
Kaye, J. 1998. Economy and nature in the fourteenth century: money, market exchange, and the emergence of scientific thought. Cambridge University Press.
[89]
Keynes, J.M. The general theory of employment, interest, and money. Prometheus Books.
[90]
Kindleberger, C.P. and Aliber, R.Z. 2011. Chapter 3, Speculative Manias. Manias, panics and crashes: a history of financial crises. Palgrave Macmillan. 39–61.
[91]
Kininmonth, K. 2016. Weber’s Protestant Work Ethic: a case study of Scottish entrepreneurs, the Coats Family of Paisley. Business History. 58, 8 (Nov. 2016), 1236–1261. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2016.1172569.
[92]
Kirby, M.W. 1992. Institutional Rigidities and Economic Decline: Reflections on the British Experience. The Economic History Review. 45, 4 (Nov. 1992). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2597412.
[93]
Klaus, I. 2014. Forging capitalism: rogues, swindlers, frauds, and the rise of modern finance. Yale University Press.
[94]
Klein, N. 2010. Alt Everything. No logo: no space, no choice, no jobs. Fourth Estate. 63–86.
[95]
Klein, N. 2010. No Logo at Ten. No logo: no space, no choice, no jobs. Fourth Estate. xv–xxxi.
[96]
Knick Harley, C. British and European Industrialization: Vol I: The Rise of Capitalism: From Ancient Origins to 1848. The Cambridge History of Capitalism. Cambridge University Press. 491–532.
[97]
Kobrak, C. and Wilkins, M. 2011. The ‘2008 Crisis’ in an economic history perspective: Looking at the twentieth century. Business History. 53, 2 (Apr. 2011), 175–192. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2011.555104.
[98]
Kruger, D.H. 1955. Hobson, Lenin, and Schumpeter on Imperialism. Journal of the History of Ideas. 16, 2 (Apr. 1955). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2707667.
[99]
Laidlaw, C. 2010. The British in the Levant: trade and perceptions of the Ottoman Empire in the eighteenth century. Tauris Academic Studies.
[100]
Lance E. Davis and Robert A. Huttenback 1982. The Political Economy of British Imperialism: Measures of Benefits and Support. The Journal of Economic History. 42, 1 (1982), 119–130.
[101]
Lanchester, J. 2010. Whoops!: why everyone owes everyone and no one can pay. Penguin.
[102]
Lansley, S. and Henley Centre for Forecasting 1994. After the gold rush: the trouble with affluence : `consumer capitalism’ and the way forward. Century.
[103]
Leng, T. 2016. Interlopers and disorderly brethren at the Stade Mart: commercial regulations and practices amongst the Merchant Adventurers of England in the late Elizabethan period. The Economic History Review. 69, 3 (Aug. 2016), 823–843. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.12132.
[104]
Lenin, V. 1968. Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism. Selected works. Progress. 169–262.
[105]
Mancke, E. 2015. Chartered Enterprises and the Evolution of the British Atlantic World. Creation of the British Atlantic world. Johns Hopkins University Press. 237–262.
[106]
Marshall, A. 1920. Chapter 3 -  Foundations of England’s Industrial Leadership. Industry and trade: a study of industrial technique and business organization, and of their influences on the conditions of various classes and nations. Macmillan. 32–54.
[107]
Marshall, A. 1920. The Education of Business Faculty. Industry and trade: a study of industrial technique and business organization, and of their influences on the conditions of various classes and nations. Macmillan. 356–364.
[108]
Marshall, P.J. 2001. The English in Asia to 1700. Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. I. British Overseas Empire to the Close of the Seventeenth Century. Oxford University Press. 264–284.
[109]
Mason, Julian1 ACCOUNTING RECORDS AND BUSINESS HISTORY. Business History. 24, 3.
[110]
Mathias, P. 2000. Risk, Credit and Kinship in Early Modern Enterprise. The early modern Atlantic economy. Cambridge University Press. 15–35.
[111]
Matthews, Derek1Anderson, Malcolm1Edwards, John Richard1 The rise of the professional accountant in British management. Economic History Review. 50, 3, 407–429.
[112]
McCartney, S. and Arnold, A.J. 2003. The railway mania of 1845‐1847: Market irrationality or collusive swindle based on accounting distortions? Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal. 16, 5 (Dec. 2003), 821–852. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1108/09513570310505970.
[113]
McGuigan, J. 2009. Chapter 1 -  The Spirits of Capitalism. Cool Capitalism. Pluto Press. 9–44.
[114]
McGuigan, J. 2009. Introduction: On Cool. Cool Capitalism. Pluto Press. 1–8.
[115]
Michael Roberts 2015. The Long Depression: Marxism and the Global Crisis of Capitalism by Michael Roberts. Haymarket Books.
[116]
Michie, R. Financial Capitalism. The Cambridge History of Capitalism. Cambridge University Press. 230–263.
[117]
Mill, John Stuart 2000. Chapter XV - Of Profits. Principles of Political Economy. Batoche Books. 405–421.
[118]
Mintz, S.W. 1986. Chapter 4, Power. Sweetness and power: the place of sugar in modern history. Penguin Books. 150–186.
[119]
Mitchell, B.R. and Deane, P. 1962. Abstract of British historical statistics. University Press.
[120]
Mitchell, B.R. and Deane, P. 1962. Abstract of British historical statistics. University Press.
[121]
Morck, R. and Yeung, B. 2003. Agency Problems in Large Family Business Groups. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice. 27, 4 (Jun. 2003), 367–382. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/1540-8520.t01-1-00015.
[122]
Morgan, K. 2000. Business Networks in the British Export Trade to North America, 1750-1800. The early modern Atlantic economy. Cambridge University Press. 36–62.
[123]
Munro, F. and Slaven, T. 2001. Networks and Markets in Clyde Shipping: The Donaldsons and the Hogarths, 1870-1939. Business History. 43, 2 (Apr. 2001), 19–50. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/713999219.
[124]
Murphy, A.L. 2009. The origins of English financial markets: investment and speculation before the South Sea Bubble. Cambridge University Press.
[125]
Neal, L. 1990. The rise of financial capitalism: international capital markets in the Age of Reason. Cambridge University Press.
[126]
Neal, L. and Williamson, J.G. 2014. The Cambridge History of Capitalism. Volume 2. Cambridge University Press.
[127]
Neilson, K. 1991. Greatly Exaggerated: The Myth of the Decline of Great Britain before 1914. The International History Review. 13, 4 (Dec. 1991), 695–725. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.1991.9640599.
[128]
Nenadic, Stana1 The small family firm in Victorian Britain. Business History. 35, 4, 86–114.
[129]
Newman, R. 2007. Chapter 4, Early British Encounters with the Indian Opium Eater. Drugs and empires: essays in modern imperialism and intoxication, c. 1500-c. 1930. Palgrave Macmillan. 57–72.
[130]
O Hogartaigh, C. Financial Accounting Practice. Routledge Companion to Accounting History. 162–188.
[131]
O’Brien, P.K. 2014. The Formation of States and Transitions to Modern Economies: England: Vol I: The Rise of Capitalism: From Ancient Origins to 1848. The Cambridge history of capitalism. Cambridge University Press. 357–532.
[132]
Odlyzko, A. 2011. The collapse of the Railway Mania, the development of capital markets, and the forgotten role of Robert Lucas Nash. Accounting History Review. 21, 3 (Nov. 2011), 309–345. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/21552851.2011.605556.
[133]
Offer, A. 1993. The British Empire, 1870-1914: A Waste of Money? The Economic History Review. 46, 2 (May 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2598015.
[134]
OLIVIER ACCOMINOTTI, MARC FLANDREAU and RIAD REZZIK 2011. The spread of empire: Clio and the measurement of colonial borrowing costs. The Economic History Review. 64, 2 (2011), 385–407.
[135]
Parsons, M.C. and Rose, M.B. 2004. Communities of Knowledge: Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Networks in the British Outdoor Trade, 1960–90. Business History. 46, 4 (Oct. 2004), 609–639. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/0007679042000231865.
[136]
Pat Hudson 1981. Proto-Industrialisation: The Case of the West Riding Wool Textile Industry in the 18th and Early 19th Centuries. History Workshop. 12 (1981), 34–61.
[137]
Patrick K. O’Brien 1988. The Costs and Benefits of British Imperialism 1846-1914. Past & Present. 120 (1988), 163–200.
[138]
Paul, H.J. 2011. Chapter 6, Reasons to invest in the South Sea Company. The South Sea bubble: an economic history of its origins and consequences. Routledge. 54–74.
[139]
Paul Kennedy 1989. The Costs and Benefits of British Imperialism 1846-1914. Past & Present. 125 (1989), 186–192.
[140]
Peter Temin 1997. Two Views of the British Industrial Revolution. The Journal of Economic History. 57, 1 (1997), 63–82.
[141]
Pettinger, L. 2016. Chapter 2, Global Capitalism. Work, consumption and capitalism. Palgrave Macmillan. 15–42.
[142]
Platt, D.C.M. 1968. The Imperialism of Free Trade: Some Reservations. The Economic History Review. 21, 2 (Aug. 1968). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2592437.
[143]
Pollard, S. 1993. Chapter 6 - Accounting and Management. The genesis of modern management: a study of the industrial revolution in Great Britain. Gregg Revivals. 209–249.
[144]
Pomeranz, K. 2000. Chapter 1 - Europe Before Asia? The great divergence: China, Europe, and the making of the modern world economy. Princeton University Press. 31–68.
[145]
Pomeranz, K. 2000. The great divergence: China, Europe, and the making of the modern world economy. Princeton University Press.
[146]
Popp, A. 2007. Building the market: John Shaw of Wolverhampton and commercial travelling in early nineteenth-century England. Business History. 49, 3 (May 2007), 321–347. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00076790701294998.
[147]
Prior, Ann1Kirby, Maurice1 The society of friends and the family firm, 1700-1830. Business History. 35, 4, 66–85.
[148]
Ricardo J. Caballero and Mohamad L. Hammour 1994. The Cleansing Effect of Recessions. The American Economic Review. 84, 5 (1994), 1350–1368.
[149]
Richard Goddard 2011. SMALL BOROUGHS AND THE MANORIAL ECONOMY: ENTERPRISE ZONES OR URBAN FAILURES? Past & Present. 210 (2011), 3–31.
[150]
Ricketts, M. 2006. Chapter 2, Theories of Entrepreneurship: Historical Development and Critical Assessment. The Oxford handbook of entrepreneurship. Oxford University Press. 33–42.
[151]
Robert A. East 1946. The Business Entrepreneur in a Changing Colonial Economy, 1763-1795. The Journal of Economic History. 6, (1946), 16–27.
[152]
Robert Brenner 1976. Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe. Past & Present. 70 (1976), 30–75.
[153]
S. R. H. Jones and Simon P. Ville 1996. Efficient Transactors or Rent-Seeking Monopolists? The Rationale for Early Chartered Trading Companies. The Journal of Economic History. 56, 4 (1996), 898–915.
[154]
Santhi Hejeebu 2005. Contract Enforcement in the English East India Company. The Journal of Economic History. 65, 2 (2005), 496–523.
[155]
Sassen, S. 2001. Chapter 8 - Employment and Earnings. The global city: New York, London, Tokyo. Princeton University Press. 201–250.
[156]
Scherer, F.M. 1965. Invention and Innovation in the Watt-Boulton Steam-Engine Venture. Technology and Culture. 6, 2 (Spring 1965). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3101072.
[157]
Schumpeter, J.A. 1934. Chapter 4 - Entrepreneurial Profit. The theory of economic development: an inquiry into profits, capital, credit, interest, and the business cycle. Harvard University Press. 128–156.
[158]
Shammas, C. 2000. The Revolutionary Impact of European Demand for Tropical Goods. The early modern Atlantic economy. Cambridge University Press. 163–185.
[159]
Shanks, M. 1972. Chapter 9, What sort of an island. The stagnant society. Penguin. 232–234.
[160]
Supple, B. 1994. Presidential Address: Fear of Failing: Economic History and the Decline of Britain. The Economic History Review. 47, 3 (Aug. 1994). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2597588.
[161]
Tawney, R.H. 1926. Chapter 4, Section 3, The Triumph of the Economic Virtues. Religion and the rise of capitalism: a historical study. J. Murray. 228–252.
[162]
Tawney, R.H. 1926. Religion and the rise of capitalism: a historical study. J. Murray.
[163]
Taylor, J. 2006. Chapter 5, Limited Liability on Trial: The Commercial Crisis of 1866. Creating capitalism: joint-stock enterprise in British politics and culture, 1800-1870. Boydell Press [for] Royal Historical Society. 176–209.
[164]
Taylor, J. and Royal Historical Society (Great Britain) 2006. Chapter 1 - Companies, Character and Competition. Creating capitalism: joint-stock enterprise in British politics and culture, 1800-1870. Boydell Press [for] Royal Historical Society. 21–52.
[165]
Taylor, J. and Royal Historical Society (Great Britain) 2006. Chapter 2 - The Sins of Speculation, from:  Creating capitalism: joint-stock enterprise in British politics and culture, 1800-1870. Creating capitalism: joint-stock enterprise in British politics and culture, 1800-1870. Boydell Press [for] Royal Historical Society. 53–92.
[166]
Temin, Peter Riding the South Sea Bubble. American Economic Review. 94, 5, 1654–1668. DOI:https://doi.org/DOI: 10.1257/0002828043052268.
[167]
Tomlinson, J. 1996. Inventing ‘Decline’: The Falling behind of the British Economy in the Postwar Years. The Economic History Review. 49, 4 (Nov. 1996). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2597971.
[168]
Toms, S. 2016. Double entry and the rise of capitalism: keeping a sense of proportion? Accounting History Review. 26, 1 (Jan. 2016), 25–31. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/21552851.2015.1129084.
[169]
Valenze, D.M. 2006. Chapter 1, ‘Coins of the Realm: The Development of a Demotics Sense of Money. The social life of money in the English past. Cambridge University Press. 31–50.
[170]
Watts, M. 2014. Commodities. Introducing human geographies. Routledge. 527–547.
[171]
Weber, M. and Kalberg, S. 2012. Chapter II -  The Spirit of Capitalism. The Protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism. Routledge. 13–38.
[172]
Weber, M. and Kalberg, S. 2012. The Protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism. Routledge.
[173]
Westall, O.M. 1996. Chapter 2, British Business History and the Culture of Business. Business history and business culture. Manchester University Press. 21–47.
[174]
Williams, E.E. 2011. Capitalism & slavery. Nabu Press.
[175]
Wills, Jr, J.E. 1993. European Consumption and Asian Production in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Consumption and the world of goods. Routledge. 133–147.
[176]
Zahediah, N. 2001. Overseas Expansion and Trade in the Seventeenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. I. British Overseas Empire to the Close of the Seventeenth Century. Oxford University Press. 398–422.
[177]
Linking Accounting, Organizations, and Institutions. Accounting, Organizations, and Institutions. Oxford University Press.
[178]
4AD. The Long Johns - The South Sea Bubble of 1720 - John Bird, John Fortune - George Parr - 20081103.