I'm pleased to report that a research paper I published in Social Science History in 2004 on antebellum Black newspapers in New York State has been selected for an important anthology, Race in the US in Social Science History. The virtual issue of SSH is now available: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/social-science-history/race-in-the-united-states-in-social-science-history

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Race in the United States in Social Science History

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Ming Gao, Qiankun Gu, Shijun He & Dongmin Kong identify the long-term impact of more centralised bureaucracy south of the Great Wall after 1449, with advantages for city building, judicial enforcement, administrative quality and levels of economic activity. New in Asia-Pacific Economic History Review
https://doi.org/10.1111/aehr.12267
@econhist @devecon @economics @sociology @politicalscience @geography @anthropology #history #histodons #china #mongolia #SocialScienceHistory #GreatWall #bureacracy
19th century abolitionism disrupted some American Protestant denominations more than others because of differences in centralized authority & capacity to suppress dissent, rather than theological variation, according to Kristin George in the most recent Social Science History. Open access https://doi.org/10.1017/ssh.2023.1
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“Ministering at the Altar of Slavery”: Religious slavery conflict and social movement repression | Social Science History | Cambridge Core

“Ministering at the Altar of Slavery”: Religious slavery conflict and social movement repression - Volume 47 Issue 2

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