AG_gamboa (@aggamboa5) 's Twitter Profile
AG_gamboa

@aggamboa5

Doctor in History. University of Pennsylvania. I read business history in the archives of the courts of justice.

ID: 1257950755375460353

linkhttps://live-sas-www-history.pantheon.sas.upenn.edu/people/grad-students/alberto-gamboa calendar_today06-05-2020 08:31:36

62 Tweet

125 Followers

182 Following

marc flandreau (@flandreaumarc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Latest baby, latest beauty! Please RETWEET generously so that people can access contents FULLY OPEN content for two weeks! Countdown has started!

Michele Sollai (@sollaimichele) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Time to celebrate! 🎉My article "How to Feed an Empire? Agrarian Science, Indigenous Farming, and Wheat Autarky in Italian-Occupied Ethiopia, 1937-1941" is out in the new issue of @AgHistorySoc. Here's the article link: doi.org/10.1215/000214…

Time to celebrate! 🎉My article "How to Feed an Empire? Agrarian Science, Indigenous Farming, and Wheat Autarky in Italian-Occupied Ethiopia, 1937-1941" is out in the new issue of @AgHistorySoc. Here's the article link: doi.org/10.1215/000214…
Michele Sollai (@sollaimichele) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It's about fascist mirages of food autarky in occupied #Ethiopia- the scientific endeavors they sparked and the ag projects that followed, their environmental and economic impact, and a bit about their legacy. Spoiler: what fascist imperialism could not accomplish, capitalism did

Michele Sollai (@sollaimichele) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The article is in great company, have a look at the whole issue read.dukeupress.edu/agricultural-h…. As I am getting more and more into global histories of dry farming for my new project, I loved reading and learned a lot from @DavidVailPhD's piece "False Gospels of Efficiency"

Damian Clavel (@damianclavel) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Happy to see my book published. By revisiting one of history’s notorious frauds, it provides insights into the foundations of 19th c. state-making, sovereign debt relationships, and British imperialism. Warmest thanks to all scholars and friends who have supported this research!

Happy to see my book published. By revisiting one of history’s notorious frauds, it provides insights into the foundations of 19th c. state-making, sovereign debt relationships, and British imperialism. Warmest thanks to all scholars and friends who have supported this research!
Michele Sollai (@sollaimichele) 's Twitter Profile Photo

📢19/01 - Save the date!📢 My colleague Marianna Fenzi and I have organized the workshop “Green Revolution(s): Contested Paths of Agricultural Modernization in the 20th Century,” which will take place at the EPFL, Lausanne (and virtually - reach out for the zoom link). /1

📢19/01 - Save the date!📢 My colleague Marianna Fenzi and I have organized the workshop “Green Revolution(s): Contested Paths of Agricultural Modernization in the 20th Century,” which will take place at the EPFL, Lausanne (and virtually - reach out for the zoom link). /1
AG_gamboa (@aggamboa5) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Chancery rolls at Kew are much better rolled, which makes it even more arduous to unroll and re-roll them properly. I never thought, until consulting dozens of them, that doing economic history could be pretty much a blue collar job

Capitalism: A Journal of History and Economics (@a_capitalism) 's Twitter Profile Photo

it's here‼️ the latest issue -- READ, READ, READ-- is in open access for two weeks 📢🗓️🎉 don't miss, enjoy, retweet 🙏🩵👋🍀 muse.jhu.edu/issue/51974

it's here‼️ the latest issue -- READ, READ, READ-- is in open access for two weeks 📢🗓️🎉
don't miss, enjoy, retweet 🙏🩵👋🍀
muse.jhu.edu/issue/51974
AG_gamboa (@aggamboa5) 's Twitter Profile Photo

And none of these issues are "economics" of course. Maybe it wasn't clear enough before: Economics is just about wage levels, taxes, and inflation. 🙈