Riding the Wave of Trade: The Rise of Labor Regulation in the Golden Age of Globalization
Type de ressource
            Article de revue
        Auteurs/contributeurs
                    - Huberman, Michael (Auteur)
 - Meissner, Christopher M. (Auteur)
 
Titre
            Riding the Wave of Trade: The Rise of Labor Regulation in the Golden Age of Globalization
        Résumé
            The received view pins the adoption of labor regulation before 1914 on domestic forces. Using directed dyad-year event history analysis, we find that trade was also a pathway of diffusion. Market access served as an important instrument to encourage the diffusion of labor regulation. The type of trade mattered as much as the volume. In the European core, states emulated the labor regulation of partners because intra-industry trade was important. The New World exported less differentiated products and pressures to imitate were weak.
        Publication
            The Journal of Economic History
        Volume
            70
        Numéro
            3
        Pages
            657-685
        Date
            2010/09
        Langue
            Anglais
        ISSN
            1471-6372, 0022-0507
        Titre abrégé
            Riding the Wave of Trade
        Consulté le
            20/01/2024 16:29
        Catalogue de bibl.
            Cambridge University Press
        Extra
            Publisher: Cambridge University Press
        Référence
            Huberman, Michael, et Christopher M. Meissner. « Riding the Wave of Trade: The Rise of Labor Regulation in the Golden Age of Globalization ». The Journal of Economic History 70, no 3 (septembre 2010) : 657‑85. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050710000574.
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