Kings as Judges: Justice in Institutional Development and Some Insights from (and for) Economic History
Representative institutions have met with renewed interest across the social sciences, either as a dependent variable or as factors in economic or political development. Yet prominent approaches, from economics to political science, assume a bargaining model of representation, whereby rights are granted in exchange for taxes. This assumption, however, fails to explain the prototypical case from which the model is usually derived, England. Placing demand for justice instead at the core of representative emergence in premodern Europe explains puzzles left unaddressed by the bargaining hypothesis. The talk will relay the findings from my book, Kings as Judges, based on a comparative study across 15 cases. It will explain how it is not taxation of urban groups but of the landed elites that matters for representative institutions, why trade was endogenous to parliamentary strength, and how recent data on English economic output help us revise some key assumptions. Finally, this revision encourages a reconsideration of some aspects of the property rights literature. Showing that Ottoman land rights are similar to English conditional land-ownership, whilst mainly differing in the capacity of the state to enforce them, challenges notions of security as key to Western economic divergence.
Date: 6 February 2024, 17:00 (Tuesday, 4th week, Hilary 2024)
Venue: Nuffield College, New Road OX1 1NF
Venue Details: https://zoom.us/j/99415477879?pwd=Mlg2RE1aelhJQTk4clhFYVJudkc4UT09
Speaker: Deborah Boucoyannis (George Washington University)
Organising department: Department of Economics
Part of: Economic and Social History Seminar
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Members of the University only
Editors: Shreyasi Banerjee, Edward Clark