Anderson, S. (2007). The Economics of Dowry and Brideprice. Journal of Economic Perspectives 21(4): 151‒74.
Ariely, D. (2008). Predictably Irrational. London: Harper.
Ashraf, Q. and Galor, O. (2011). Dynamics and Stagnation in the Malthusian Epoch. American Economic Review 101(5): 2003‒41.
Atkinson, A. (2001). A Critique of the Transatlantic Consensus on Rising Income Inequality. The World Economy 24(4): 433‒52.
Austin, G. (2016). Sub-Saharan Africa, in J. Baten (ed.), A History of the Global Economy: 1500 to the Present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 316‒50.
Autor, D., Dorn, D. and Hanson, G. (2013). The China Syndrome: Local Labor Market Effects of Import Competition in the United States. American Economic Review 103(6): 2121‒68.
Autor, D., Dorn, D. and Hanson, G. (2016). The China Shock: Learning from Labor-Market Adjustment to Large Changes in Trade. Annual Review of Economics 8(1): 205‒40.
Backhouse, R. (2002). The Penguin History of Economics. London: Penguin.
Baddeley, M. (2017). Behavioural Economics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Baddeley, M. (2018). Copycats and Contrarians. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Balakrishnan, R., Heintz, J. and Elson, D. (2016). Rethinking Economic Policy for Social Justice. Abingdon: Routledge.
Bandiera, O. and Natraj, A. (2013). Does Gender Inequality Hinder Development and Economic Growth? Evidence and Policy Implications. The World Bank Research Observer 28(1): 2‒21.
Banyard, K. (2016). Pimp State. London: Faber & Faber.
Barsh, J. and Yee, L. (2011). Unlocking the Full Potential of Women in the US Economy. New York: McKinsey Global Institute.
Basu, K. (2006). Gender and Say: A Model of Household Behaviour with Endogenously Determined Balance of Power. The Economic Journal 116(511): 558‒80.
Bateman, V. (2014). Why I Posed Naked and Natural. The Guardian. 16 May.
Bateman, V. (2015a). Social Mobility: What Really Holds People Back? Times Higher Education, 11 August.
Bateman, V. (2015b). Reducing Poverty the Female Way. CapX, 17 November.
Bateman, V. (2016a). Classical Liberalism: The Foundation for a New Economics? Critical Review 28(3‒4): 440‒60.
Bateman, V. (2016b). Markets and Growth in Early Modern Europe. London: Routledge.
Bateman, V. (2016c). Tax Policy is Widening the Gender Gap. Bloomberg View, 14 April.
Bateman, V. (2016d). The World has a Sex Problem: It's Hurting Growth. Bloomberg View, 9 September.
Bateman, V. (2016e). Women, Fertility and Economic Growth. Economic History Society Annual Conference Paper.
Bateman, V. (2017a). Economics Must Embrace the Sex Industry. Times Higher Education, 30 March.
Bateman, V. (2017b). Capitalism is Suffering a Crisis of Care. Unherd, 21 November.
Bates, R. (2014). The Imperial Peace, in E. Akyeampong, R. Bates, N. Nunn and J. Robinson (ed.), Africa's Development in Historical Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 424‒44.
Bearak, J., Popinchalk, A., Alkema, L. and Sedgh, G. (2018). Global, Regional, and Subregional Trends in Unintended Pregnancy and its Outcomes from 1990 to 2014: Estimates from a Bayesian Hierarchical Model. The Lancet Global Health 6(4): e380‒e389.
Beauvoir, S. de (1973). The Second Sex. New York: Vintage.
Becker, G. (1981). A Treatise on the Family. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Beckert, S. (2015). Empire of Cotton: A New History of Global Capitalism. London: Penguin.
Benería, L., Berik, G. and Floro, M. (2016). Gender, Development and Globalization. Abingdon: Routledge.
Berger, I. and White, E. (2008). Women in Sub-Saharan Africa. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Bergmann, B. (1995). Becker's Theory of the Family: Preposterous Conclusions. Feminist Economics 1(1): 141‒50.
Berik, G. (2018). Toward More Inclusive Measures of Economic Well-being: Debates and Practices. Geneva: ILO.
Bertola, L. and Ocampo, J. (2016). Latin America, in J. Baten (ed.), A History of the Global Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Besley, T. and Persson, T. (2009). The Origins of State Capacity: Property Rights, Taxation, and Politics. American Economic Review 99(4): 1218‒44.
Bettio, F., Della Giusta, M. and Di Tommaso, M. (2017). Sex Work and Trafficking: Moving Beyond Dichotomies. Feminist Economics 23(3): 1‒22.
Bindel, J. (2017a). Why Prostitution Should Never Be Legalised. The Guardian, 11 October.
Bindel, J. (2017b). The Pimping of Prostitution: Abolishing the Sex Work Myth. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Birks, K. (2018). Grid Girls and Puritans. Quillette, 9 February.
Bisin, A. and Verdier, T. (2000). ‘Beyond the Melting Pot’: Cultural Transmission, Marriage, and the Evolution of Ethnic and Religious Traits. Quarterly Journal of Economics 115(3): 955‒88.
Bisin, A. and Verdier, T. (2001). The Economics of Cultural Transmission and the Dynamics of Preferences. Journal of Economic Theory 97(2): 298‒319.
Bjørnholt, M. and McKay, A. (2014). Counting on Marilyn Waring: New Advances in Feminist Economics. Bradford, ON: Demeter Press.
Black, S., Grönqvist, E. and Öckert, B. (2017). Born to Lead? The Effect of Birth Order on Noncognitive Abilities. Review of Economics and Statistics 100(2): 274‒86.
Blaydes, L. and Chaney, E. (2013). The Feudal Revolution and Europe's Rise: Political Divergence of the Christian West and the Muslim World before 1500 CE. American Political Science Review 107(1): 16‒34.
Blecker, R. and Seguino, S. (2002). Macroeconomic Effects of Reducing Gender Wage Inequality in an Export-Oriented, Semi-Industrialized Economy. Review of Development Economics 6(1): 103‒19.
Bordo, S. (1986). The Cartesian Masculinization of Thought. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 11(3): 439‒56.
Borshay Lee, R. (1969). Eating Christmas in the Kalahari. Natural History (December): 60‒4.
Boserup, E. (1970). Woman's Role in Economic Development. London: Allen & Unwin.
Botticini, M. and Siow, A. (2003). Why Dowries? American Economic Review 93: 1385‒98.
Bourguignon, F. and Morrisson, C. (2002). Inequality among World Citizens: 1820‒1992. American Economic Review 92(4): 727‒44.
Boushey, H., de Long, J. and Steinbaum, M. (2017). After Piketty. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Bowden, W. (1925). Industrial Society in England. New York: Macmillan.
Braunstein, E., van Staveren, I. and Tavani, D. (2011). Embedding Care and Unpaid Work in Macroeconomic Modeling: A Structuralist Approach. Feminist Economics 17(4): 5‒31.
Broadberry, S. (2016). The Great Divergence in the World Economy: Long-Run Trends of Real Income, in J. Baten (ed.), A History of the Global Economy: 1500 to the Present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 35‒9.
Broadberry, S. and Wallis, J. (2017). Growing, Shrinking, and Long-Run Economic Performance: Historical Perspectives on Economic Development. NBER Working Paper 23343.
Bryson, V. (2016). Feminist Political Theory. London: Palgrave.
Budig, M. and Misra, J. (2010). How Care-work Employment Shapes Earnings in Cross-National Perspective. International Labour Review 149(4): 441‒60.
Bukodi, E., Goldthorpe, J., Waller, L. and Kuha, J. (2014). The Mobility Problem in Britain: New Findings from the Analysis of Birth Cohort Data. The British Journal of Sociology 66(1): 93‒117.
Burguiere, A., Klapisch-Zuber, C., Segalen, M., Lévi-Strauss, C. and Tenison, S. (1996). History of the Family. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Burnette, J. (2008). Women Workers in the British Industrial Revolution, ed. Robert Whaples. EH.Net Encyclopedia.
Campbell, B. (2016). The Great Transition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Campbell, G., Miers, S. and Miller, J. (2008). Women and Slavery. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press.
Carmichael, S. (2016). Marriage, Family and Gender Inequality. PhD. Utrecht.
&nbs
p; Carmichael, S., de Pleijt, A. and van Zanden, J. (2016). Gender Relations and Economic Development: Hypotheses about the Reversal of Fortune in EurAsia. CGEH Working Paper. Utrecht University.
Carmichael, S., de Pleijt, A., van Zanden, J. and de Moor, T. (2015). Reply to Tracy Dennison and Sheilagh Ogilvie: The European Marriage Pattern and the Little Divergence. CGEH Working Paper. Utrecht University.
Chambers, C. (2008). Sex, Culture, and Justice. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press.
Chang, H. (2011). 23 Things They Don't Tell You about Capitalism. London: Bloomsbury.
Chant, S. (2008). The ‘Feminisation of Poverty’ and the ‘Feminisation’ of Anti-Poverty Programmes: Room for Revision? The Journal of Development Studies 44(2): 165‒97.
Checkland, S. (1964). The Rise of Industrial Society in England, 1815‒1885. London: Longmans.
Chetty, R. and Hendren, N. (2018a). The Impacts of Neighborhoods on Intergenerational Mobility I: Childhood Exposure Effects. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 133(3): 1107‒62.
Chetty, R. and Hendren, N. (2018b). The Impacts of Neighborhoods on Intergenerational Mobility II: County-Level Estimates. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 133(3): 1163‒228.
Chetty, R., Hendren, N., Kline, P. and Saez, E. (2014). Where is the Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United States. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 129(4): 1553‒623.
Chetty, R., Hendren, N., Lin, F., Majerovitz, J. and Scuderi, B. (2016). Childhood Environment and Gender Gaps in Adulthood. American Economic Review 106(5): 282‒8.
Cinnirella, F., Klemp, M. and Weisdorf, J. (2017). Malthus in the Bedroom: Birth Spacing as Birth Control in Pre-Transition England. Demography 54(2): 413‒36.
Clark, G. (2007). A Farewell to Alms. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Clarkson, F. (1939). History of Prostitution. The Canadian Medical Association Journal 41(3): 296‒301.
Cogoni, C., Carnaghi, A. and Silani, G. (2018). Reduced Empathic Responses for Sexually Objectified Women: An fMRI Investigation. Cortex 99: 258‒72.
Cohen, J. (2005). The Vulcanization of the Human Brain: A Neural Perspective on Interactions between Cognition and Emotion. Journal of Economic Perspectives 19(4): 3‒24.
Collins, M. and Teele, D. (2017). Revisiting the Gender Voting Gap in the Era of Women’s Suffrage. Unpublished paper.
Cooke, L. (2011). Gender‒Class Equality in Political Economies. New York: Routledge.
Coontz, S. (2014). The New Instability. The New York Times, Sunday Review, 26 July.
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. (1997). African Women: A Modern History. New York: Perseus.
Cornell, D. (2007). Feminism and Pornography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Corvid, M. (2015). Should it be Illegal to Pay for Sex? We have a Right to Profit from our Sexual Labour. The Guardian, 24 March.
Coyle, D. (2014). GDP: A Brief and Affectionate History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Cudd, A. and Holmstrom, N. (2011). Capitalism, for and against. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Daggers, J. and Neal, D. (2006). Sex, Gender, and Religion. New York: Peter Lang.
Dahlerup, D. (2018). Has Democracy Failed Women? Cambridge: Polity Press.
Daly, M. (2005). Changing Family Life in Europe: Significance for State and Society. European Societies 7(3): 379‒98.
Damasio, A. (1994). Descartes’ Error and the Future of Human Life. Scientific American 271(4): 144.
Das Gupta, M. (1999). Lifeboat versus Corporate Ethic: Social and demographic Implications of Stem and Joint Families. Social Science & Medicine 49(2): 173‒84.
Das Gupta, M., Zhenghua, J., Bohua, L., Zhenming, X., Chung, W. and Hwa-Ok, B. (2003). Why is Son Preference So Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India and the Republic of Korea. Journal of Development Studies 40(2): 153‒87.
Dasgupta, A. (1987). Epochs of Economic Theory. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
De Long, J. and Shleifer, A. (1993). Princes and Merchants: European City Growth before the Industrial Revolution. The Journal of Law and Economics 36(2): 671‒702.
De Moor, T. and van Zanden, J. (2010). Girl Power: The European Marriage Pattern and Labour Markets in the North Sea Region in the Late Medieval and Early Modern Period. The Economic History Review 63(1): 1‒33.
De Vries, J. (2008). The Industrious Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
De Vries, J. and van der Woude, A. (1997). The First Modern Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Della Giusta, M., di Tommaso, M. and Jewell, S. (2017). Stigma and Risky Behaviors among Male Clients of Sex Workers in the UK. Feminist Economics 23(3): 23‒48.
Dennison, T. and Ogilvie, S. (2014). Does the European Marriage Pattern Explain Economic Growth? The Journal of Economic History 74(3): 651‒93.
Diamond, J. (1999). Guns, Germs, and Steel. New York: W. W. Norton.
Dilli, S., Rijpma, A. and Carmichael, S. (2015). Achieving Gender Equality: Development versus Historical Legacies. Economic Studies 61(1): 301‒34.
Dincecco, M., Fenske, J. and Onorato, M. (2014). Is Africa Different? Historical Conflict and State Development. SSRN Electronic Journal, 15 December.
Dowling, E. (2015). Retrieving the Heart of the Market? Just World Institute, University of Edinburgh, 28 July.
Dowling, E. and Harvie, D. (2014). Harnessing the Social: State, Crisis and (Big) Society. Sociology 48(5): 869‒86.
Duflo, E. (2003). Grandmothers and Granddaughters: Old-Age Pensions and Intrahousehold Allocation in South Africa. The World Bank Economic Review 17(1): 1‒25.
Duflo, E. (2012). Women Empowerment and Economic Development. Journal of Economic Literature 50(4): 1051‒79.
Duke, B. (2015). How Married Women's Rising Earnings Have Reduced Inequality. Center for American Progress, 29 September.
Dworkin, A. (1993). Prostitution and Male Supremacy. Michigan Journal of Gender and Law 1(1): 1‒12.
Dyble, M., Salali, G., Chaudhary, N., et al. (2015). Sex Equality Can Explain the Unique Social Structure of Hunter-Gatherer Bands. Science 348(6236): 796‒8.
Dyer, C. (2009). An Age of Transition? Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Easterly, W. and Levine, R. (2003). Tropics, Germs, and Crops: How Endowments Influence Economic Development. Journal of Monetary Economics 50(1): 3‒39.
Edgeworth, F. (1923). Women's Wages in Relation to Economic Welfare. The Economic Journal 33(132): 487.
Edlund, L. (2006). Marriage: Past, Present, Future? Economic Studies 52(4): 621‒39.
Edlund, L. and Kopczuk, W. (2009). Women, Wealth, and Mobility. American Economic Review 99(1): 146‒78.
Edlund, L. and Korn, E. (2002). A Theory of Prostitution. Journal of Political Economy 110(1): 181‒214.
Edlund, L. and Lagerlöf, N. (2006). Individual Versus Parental Consent in Marriage: Implications for Intra-Household Resource Allocation and Growth. American Economic Review 96(2): 304‒7.
Edwards, J. and Ogilvie, S. (2018). Did the Black Death Cause Economic Development by ‘Inventing’ Fertility Restriction? 7 May, CESifo Working Paper Series No. 7016. Munich: Center for Economic Studies and Ifo Institute.
Ehret, C. (2014). Africa in World History Before ca. 1440, in E. Akyeampong, R. Bates, N. Nunn and J. Robinson (eds), Africa's Development in Historical Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Elbaum, B. and Lazonick, W. (1984). The Decline of the British Economy: An Institutional Perspective. The Journal of Economic History 44(2): 567‒83.
Elson, D. (1998). The Economic, the Political and the Domestic: Businesses, States and Households in the Organization of Production. New Political Economy 3(2): 189‒208.
Elson, D. (2012). The Reduction of the UK Budget Deficit: A Human Rights Perspective. International Review of Applied Economics 26(2): 177‒90.
Elson, D. and Cagatay, N. (2000). The Social Content of Macroeconomic Policies. World Development 28(7): 1347
‒64.
Eltis, D. and Engerman, S. (2000). The Importance of Slavery and the Slave Trade to Industrializing Britain. The Journal of Economic History 60(1): 123‒44.
Engels, F. and Hunt, T. (2010). The Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State. London: Penguin Classics.
Engerman, S. and Sokoloff, K. (2002). Factor Endowments, Inequality, and Paths of Development among New World Economies. Economía 3(1): 41‒109.
England, P. (1989). A Feminist Critique of Rational-Choice Theories: Implications for Sociology. The American Sociologist 20(1): 14‒28.
Epstein, S. (2000). Freedom and Growth. New York: Routledge.
Ertürk, K. and Cagatay, N. (1995). Macroeconomic Consequences of Cyclical and Secular Changes in Feminization: An Experiment at Gendered Macromodeling. World Development 23(11): 1969‒77.
Esping-Andersen, G. (2000). Social Foundations of Postindustrial Economies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Esping-Andersen, G. (2009). The Incomplete Revolution. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Esping-Andersen, G. (2013). The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Eswaran, M. (2014). Why Gender Matters in Economics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Evans, A. (2016). The Decline of the Male Breadwinner and Persistence of the Female Carer: Exposure, Interests, and Micro–Macro Interactions. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106(5): 1135‒51.
Fara, P. (2010). A Four Thousand Year History. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Faria, F. (2018). The Double Movement in Polanyi and Hayek. Ethics, Politics & Society 1: 22.
Fatah-Black, K. and van Rossum, M. (2014). Beyond Profitability: The Dutch Transatlantic Slave Trade and its Economic Impact. Slavery & Abolition 36(1): 63‒83.
Federici, S. (2004). Caliban and the Witch. New York: Autonomedia.
Fehr, E. and Gächter, S. (2000). Cooperation and Punishment in Public Goods Experiments. American Economic Review 90(4): 980‒94.
Ferber, M. and Lowry, H. (1976). The Sex Differential in Earnings: A Reappraisal. Industry and Labour Relations Review 29(3): 377‒87.
Ferber, M. and Nelson, J. (1993). Beyond Economic Man. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
The Sex Factor Page 26