Connection, Contingency, and Class in the Early Republic's Economy - Fifth Annual Conference of the Program in Early American Economy & Society, Friday, October 28, 2005
Menu - scroll to bottom of page for alternate menu The Program in Early American Economy and Society (PEAES) is dedicated to promoting scholarly research and publication related to the origins and development of the early American economy, broadly conceived, in such fields as business, finance, commerce, manufacturing, labor, political economy, households and gender, and technology. PEAES actively seeks to link new and existing scholarship on the early American economy to other programs pursuing complementary goals, and it strives to reach a broad public audience. Also at the center of the Program’s activities are a fellowship program for both junior and senior scholars, a monograph publication series with Johns Hopkins University Press, the editing and publication of various volumes of essays by noted scholars and special issues of scholarly journals, seminars featuring important scholarship, an annual award for the best journal article relating to early American economic history, a regional survey of manuscript and printed resources in economic history, acquisition of thousands of printed materials to augment the Library Company’s existing rich collections, and public program to extend PEAES resources to as wide an audience as possible. You can read more about each of these activities on the PEAES web pages:  www.librarycompany.org/Economics
The Library Company of Philadelphia, 1314 Locust Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107 - TEL 215-546-3181 FAX 215-546-5167 For More Information Contact Cathy Matson, PEAES Director at cmatson@udel.edu

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