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The Fruits of Revolution Jean-Laurent Rosenthal (University of California, Los Angeles)

The Fruits of Revolution By Jean-Laurent Rosenthal (University of California, Los Angeles)

Summary

Based on an in-depth study of the effect of property rights on water control, The Fruits of Revolution examines the impact of revolution on French agricultural development. The book focuses on broad questions of economic change, yet it is based on detailed archival investigations of the impact of property rights on water control.

The Fruits of Revolution Summary

The Fruits of Revolution: Property Rights, Litigation and French Agriculture, 1700-1860 by Jean-Laurent Rosenthal (University of California, Los Angeles)

In The Fruits of Revolution Jean-Laurent Rosenthal investigates two central questions in French economic history: To what extent did institutions hold back agricultural development under the Old Regime, and did reforms carried out during the French Revolution significantly improve the structure of property rights in agriculture? Both questions have been the subject of much debate. Historians have touched on them in a number of local studies, yet usually they have been more concerned with community conflict than with economic development. Economists generally have researched the performance of the French economy without paying much attention to the impact of institutions on specific areas of the economy. This book attempts to utilize the best of both approaches: It focuses on broad questions of economic change, yet it is based on detailed archival investigations of the impact of property rights on water control.

The Fruits of Revolution Reviews

This book deserves a wide audience among scholars working at the intersection of economic, legal and political history. Reviews of Books
Well documented, and fully informed with state-of-the-art economic analysis, this book provides an example of the very best that modern economic history has to offer. The Annalas of the American Academy
It is Rosenthal's contention that it was the institutional improvements realized by the Revolution that in time permitted full access to technological change. From this point of view the events of 1789 brought France into the modern world. Nineteenth-century scholars will find this volume worthwhile reading for the information it provides about the economic history of the period. Leonore Loft, Nineteenth-Century French Studies

Table of Contents

List of tables, figures, and maps; Series editors' preface; Preface; 1. Introduction; Part I. History And Economics: 2. The French Revolution and French economic history; 3. Institutions and economic growth; Part II. Drainage and Irrigation: 4. A survey of water control projects; 5. Relative prices and the supply of water control; 6. Drainage in the Pays d'Auge, 1700-1848: the weight of uncertain property rights; 7. The development of irrigation in Provence, 1700-1860: the French Revolution and economic growth; Part III. Property Rights and Litigation under Absolutism: 8. The weaknesses of monopoly power; 9. Settlement, litigation, and the drainage of marshes in England and France, 1600-1840; 10. Conclusion; Appendices; Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NLS9780521103121
9780521103121
0521103126
The Fruits of Revolution: Property Rights, Litigation and French Agriculture, 1700-1860 by Jean-Laurent Rosenthal (University of California, Los Angeles)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2009-03-19
236
N/A
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