
Financial History Review
@fhrjournal
The Review seeks to embrace a broad approach to financial, banking, and monetary history, which appeals to a wide audience of historians and economists.
ID: 1626982817472331777
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/financial-history-review 18-02-2023 16:33:43
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We are delighted to announce that all articles accepted for publication in FHR from 10th December 2024 will be ‘open access’, published with a Creative Commons licence and freely available to read online. Caroline Fohlin Aldo Musacchio Gertjan Verdickt cambridge.org/core/journals/…


A big congrats to Tyler Muir on winning the Fischer-Black prize, demonstrating significant original research that is relevant to finance practice! Did you know that Dr. Muir also had a paper in FHR last year? Read more of "1930, First Modern Crisis": cambridge.org/core/journals/…

Why Does the U.S. Lead Investment Banking? 🇺🇸💰 In Episode 7.2 of the #eabhPodcast, Caroline Fohlin (Emory) and Hugo Banziger (eabh) explore: 🔹 How did the U.S. outpace Europe? 🔹 Why is its dominance so resilient? 🔹 The impact of mutual funds, regulations, and political


Our editor Caroline Fohlin with an insightful episode on US investment banking. Worth a listen!

The 2025 EABH Annual Meeting takes place in Paris: Thursday, 12 June 2025 Archives, artefacts, and professional practices Call for papers: lnkd.in/esark-NS Friday, 13 June 2025 Public Debt & Financial Stability Call for papers: lnkd.in/eRjpisJ4 Carmen Hofmann



Explore the evolution of #Germany 's financial sector post-#Wirtschaftswunder. Matthias Kemmerer and Carmen Hofmann dive into the era of ‘Gentlemen’s agreements,’ national sovereignty, and global integration. Did these informal deals shield or advance Germany’s economy? Why

