Economic History Association | |
Abbreviation: | EHA |
Formation: | 1940 |
Vat Id: | (for European organizations) --> |
Headquarters: | Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse[1] |
Membership: | 1,000 |
Owners: | --> |
Leader Title: | Executive Director |
Leader Name: | Michael Haupert |
Leader Title2: | President |
Leader Name2: | John Wallis |
Leader Title3: | President-Elect |
Leader Name3: | Ann Carlos |
The Economic History Association (EHA) was founded in 1940 to "encourage and promote teaching, research, and publication on every phase of economic history and to help preserve and administer materials for research in economic history". It publishes The Journal of Economic History with the Cambridge University Press, holds an annual meeting that usually takes place in September, and awards prizes and grants.[2] It is also the home to the EH.Net Encyclopedia of Economic and Business History.[3]
Prior to the creation of the EHA, many American economic historians were members of the Economic History Society, which was established in the UK in 1926.[4] In 1939, there was a push among some members of the American Historical Association and the American Economic Association to set up an American economic history association. The meeting to found the Economic History Association, which was organized by Earl J. Hamilton, was held on December 29, 1939.
There are more than 1,000 EHA members worldwide,[2] and composed of faculty and graduate students from universities around the world, as well as economists in the private sector and in government.
Michael Haupert of the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse is the executive director, and John Wallis is the President.[5] Previous EHA Presidents include Oxford's Robert C. Allen, Vanderbilt's Jeremy Atack, UC Berkeley's Barry Eichengreen, Yale's Naomi Lamoreaux, as well as Economics Nobel Laureates Robert Fogel and Douglass North.
The Economic History Association supports research through Arthur H. Cole grants-in-aid and awards prizes for publications, dissertations, and teaching, as well as fellowships and grants for students of economic history.
It awards several prizes for publications:[6]
The society also provides grants to support the early stages of dissertation work in economic history and fellowships to support students finishing their dissertations on the topic. Two Kenneth Sokoloff fellowships are awarded by the EHA each year to students finishing their dissertations in economic history.
EHA's annual conference is held each September in North America. The 2018 meeting took place in Montreal, with the theme "‘From Plague, Famine, and War, Save us, O Lord’ Shocks and Disasters in Economic History".[9] The 2019 conference in Atlanta was themed "Markets and Governments in Economic History."[10] According to the normal schedule submissions for consideration for the 2020 conference will be due in January 2020.
In partnership with American Economic Association, EHA has designated sessions at the annual ASSA conference each January.[11]