Fr. 147.00

Trade, Regulation and Empire State-building in Britain - The Board of Trade's Role in Building the British Regulatory State

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 6 a 7 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

This book explores the impact of the Board of Trade upon the British state from the early seventeenth century to the early twentieth century. The study argues that for too long historians have overlooked the Board, yet it was a critical force in shaping the British state and in developing its capacity both for economic regulation and for economic development. Focusing on the slave trade and on the textiles, shipping, and infrastructural industries, the authors examine the Board of Trade s role in shaping, promoting, and protecting these industries and thereby in defining the British state s economic interests. 
The book adds the notion of an imperial-corporate state to widely used concepts of fiscal-military and mercantilist state-building. Challenging the adequacy of the many theories which emphasise taxation and currency in state-building, this study stresses the importance of micro-economic interventions. It unpacks the distinctive character of the British state s system of micro-economic governance by tracing one central department s evolution and its relations with other departments, British businesses and infrastructure, and with the governance structures operating between state, company-states, colonies, and domestic business. Three sub-periods of the Board of Trade s history are distinguished, each marked by a distinctive relationship with the domestic and imperial economies and by characteristic approaches to regulatory oversight.
The book will be of interest to academics and students in business, economic, and political history, and all those interested in the structure of the British state, its legacies of running empires, its relationship with industrial policies and industrialisation, and how it developed its regulatory shape.

Sommario

Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Theorising Empire State-building.- Chapter 3: Commissions, Committees, and Councils of Trade, 1622-1696.- Chapter 4: The Board of Trade and Empire State-building in Eighteenth-century Britain, 1696-1815.- Chapter 5: The Board of Trade, Regulation, and Business in the Long Nineteenth Century, 1815-1914.

Info autore

Martha Prevezer
is Professor of Governance and Economic History at Queen Mary University of London, UK.

Perri 6
is Professor Emeritus in Public Management, School of Business and Management, Queen Mary University of London, UK, and Visiting Professor, Centre for the Analysis of Risk and Regulation, London School of Economics and Political Science.

Ed Legon
is Senior Lecturer in Heritage Management and Business History at Queen Mary University of London, UK.

Riassunto

This book explores the impact of the Board of Trade upon the British state from the early seventeenth century to the early twentieth century. The study argues that for too long historians have overlooked the Board, yet it was a critical force in shaping the British state and in developing its capacity both for economic regulation and for economic development. Focusing on the slave trade and on the textiles, shipping, and infrastructural industries, the authors examine the Board of Trade’s role in shaping, promoting, and protecting these industries and thereby in defining the British state’s economic interests. 
The book adds the notion of an imperial-corporate state to widely used concepts of fiscal-military and mercantilist state-building. Challenging the adequacy of the many theories which emphasise taxation and currency in state-building, this study stresses the importance of micro-economic interventions. It unpacks the distinctive character of the British state’s system of micro-economic governance by tracing one central department’s evolution and its relations with other departments, British businesses and infrastructure, and with the governance structures operating between state, company-states, colonies, and domestic business. Three sub-periods of the Board of Trade’s history are distinguished, each marked by a distinctive relationship with the domestic and imperial economies and by characteristic approaches to regulatory oversight.
The book will be of interest to academics and students in business, economic, and political history, and all those interested in the structure of the British state, its legacies of running empires, its relationship with industrial policies and industrialisation, and how it developed its regulatory shape.

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