International Economic History Association
The International Economic History Association is an association of national, regional, and international organizations dedicated to the field of economic history, broadly defined. The IEHA includes 45 member organizations in 40 countries around the world. Headquartered in Utrecht, Netherlands, the IEHA promotes the study of and facilitates collaboration on a variety of projects, publications, and initiatives. While the IEHA has origins in European historiographies, it has since expanded its scope and membership to include economies and scholars outside of traditional areas of research.
The IEHA is most well known for its triannual congress, the World Economic History Congress, an international and interdisciplinary event where over 1,000 economic historians convene each meeting to discuss trends in the field. Attendees of the conference include economists, historians, policymakers, heads of states, government ministers, and scholars of economic history.
History
Founding
At the height of the Cold War in 1960, the IEHA was founded to unite scholars in Western Europe, the United States, and the Soviet Union. Among economists there were concerns of spurring and sustaining economic growth in many economic history departments in the United Kingdom and the United States. Similarly, Alexander Gerschenkron sought to build on Rostow's stages of economic growth with his research on economic backwardness. At the same time, the founding of the IEHA originally stemmed from the work of Fernand Braudel and Immanuel Wallerstein on economic growth in early modern Europe. Throughout the twentieth century, the IEHA gradually grew in size and the number of papers presented.In 1968, the member organizations of the IEHA convened for the first meeting outside of Europe. The fourth meeting met in Bloomington, Indiana, United States.
By 2012, the organization expanded its global approach to the discipline by hosting its first conference outside of Europe. Around 750 attendees from 55 countries attended the World Economic History Congress in Stellenbosch, South Africa. European scholars at the conference were more interested in the North-South divide, thus facilitating the developing of African economic history as a whole. The conference was, in part, organized by the African Agenda, and boosted tourism to the local community. Academics have noted that the hosting of the Congress in Stellenbosch positioned the country to become one of the leading cenrtres of economic history on the African continent. The opening address, delivered by Minister of Finance Pravin Gordhan, recognized the economic and political potential that the conference had for the South African economy.
The first Congress to convene in Asia took place in Kyoto, Japan in August 2015. Presentations focused less on European economies and more on Latin American and Asian economies. The meeting thus presented an important moment, not just for economic history, but also for global history. The conference led to the publication of Jörg Baten's A History of the Global Economy: 1500 to the Present that, according to one reviewer "was commissioned by the International Economic History Association and the editor states that his aim is to organize a 'non-Eurocentric history' that presents 'economic history in a balanced way.'"
In recent years, the organization has returned its focus to present-day questions. In 2018, President Anne McCants spoke of the importance of understanding globalization: its origins, its effects on inequality, and the importance of big data. At the congress, held in Boston, Massachusetts French economist Thomas Piketty and author of Capital in the Twenty-First Century described the World Economic History Congress as “one of the few places in the world where economists and historians talk to each other, and we truly need this interdisciplinary approach.” The IEHA produces an annual bulletin of conferences and meetings for economic historians.
Leadership
Former Presidents of the IEHA include:- 1965–1968: Frederic Chapin Lane
- 1968–1974: Kristof Glamann
- 1974–1978: Peter Mathias
- 1978–1982: Zsigmond Pál Pach
- 1982–1986: Jean-Francois Bergier
- 1986–1990: Herman Van der Wee
- 1994–1998: Gabriel Tortella
- 1998–2002: Roberto Cortés Conde
- 2002–2006: Richard Sutch
- 2006–2009: Riitta Hjerppe
- 2012–2015: Grietjie Verhoef
- 2015–2018: Tetsuji Okazaki
- 2018–2021: Anne McCants
- 1998–2006: Jan Luiten van Zanden
- 2006–2012: Jörg Baten
- 2012–2015: Debin Ma
- 2018–2021: Jari Eloranta
Organization
Membership
The IEHA comprises 45 member organizations, including the following.Organization | Location | Year founded | Website |
Business History Conference | International | 1954 | |
Cliometric Society | International | 1960 | |
European Business History Association | International | 1993 | |
European Historical Economics Society | International | 1991 | |
International Maritime Economic History Association | International | 1986 | |
International Social History Association | International | 2005 | |
Asociacion Argentina de Historia Economica | Americas | ||
Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em História Econômica | Americas | ||
Canadian Network for Economic History/ Réseau canadien d'histoire économique | Americas | ||
Economic History Association | Americas | 1940 | |
Asociación Uruguaya de Historia Económica | Americas | ||
Economic History Society of Australia and New Zealand | Asia Pacific | ||
Chinese Association for Economic History Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences | Asia Pacific | ||
Indian Economic and Social History Association, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi | Asia Pacific | 1963 | |
Economic and Social History Association of Israel | Asia Pacific | ||
Korean Economic History Society, Chung-Ang University | Asia Pacific | ||
Economic History Society of Southern Africa | Africa | ||
Austrian Economic and Social Historians | Europe | ||
Belgische Vereniging voor sociale en economische geschiedenis, University of Gent | Europe | ||
Czech Economic History Society | Europe | ||
Danish Society for Economic and Social History | Europe | ||
Finnish Economic History Association | Europe | ||
Association Française d'Histoire Économique | Europe | ||
Gesellschaft für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte | Europe | 1961 | |
Gesellschaft für Unternehmensgeschichte e.V. | Europe | 1976 | |
Greek Economic History Society | Europe | ||
Hungarian Economic History Association, Eötvös Loránd University | Europe | ||
Economic and Social History Society of Ireland | Europe | 1970 | |
Società italiana degli storici dell'economia | Europe | ||
N.W. Posthumus Instituut, Radboud Universiteit | Europe | 2016 | |
Norwegian Member Organization | Europe | ||
Committee on Economic History, Polish Academy of Science | Europe | ||
Portuguese Association of Economic and Social History | Europe | ||
Commission on the History of the Economy and the History of Economic Thinking / Commission sur l'Histoire de l'Economie et l'Histoire de la Pensée Economique de l'Académie Roumaine | Europe | ||
National Committee of Historians, Russian Academy of Science | Europe | ||
Asociación Española de Historia Económica | Europe | 1972 | |
Swedish Economic History Association, Göteborg University | Europe | ||
Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte | Europe | 1974 | |
Economic and Social History Foundation of Turkey | Europe | ||
Economic History Society | Europe | 1926 |
World Economic History Congress
Every four years, the IEHA hosts a World Economic History Congress on a particular topic in economic history. The meetings aim to bring together scholars who focus on to discuss present-day debates in the discipline. Past meetings include: The initial meetings were titled the International Conference and held in western European countries. The fifth meeting was held in Leningrad, Russia and, by the eighth meeting in Budapest, Hungary, the name was changed to the International Economic History Congress. The latter had over 850 economic historians from 88 countries participate. Its goal was to promote regulate debates in the international community of scholars. In 1994, the Eleventh International Economic History Congress in Milan, Italy had over 1,100 participants from more than 50 countries. The Congress has also been vital for the development of quantitative economic history, also known as cliometrics.Meeting | Theme | Location | Date | Website |
First International Conference of Economic History | Stockholm, Sweden | 1960 | ||
Second International Conference of Economic History | Provence, France | 1962 | ||
Third International Conference of Economic History | Munich, Germany | 1965 | ||
Fourth International Conference of Economic History | Bloomington, Indiana, USA | 1968 | ||
Fifth International Conference of Economic History | Leningrad, Russia | 1970 | ||
Sixth International Congress of Economic History | Copenhagen, Denmark | 1974 | ||
Seventh International Congress of Economic History | Edinburgh, Scotland | 1978 | ||
Eighth International Economic History Congress | Budapest, Hungary | 16–20 August 1982 | ||
Ninth International Economic History Congress | Bern, Switzerland | 1986 | ||
Tenth International Economic History Congress | Leuven, Belgium | August 1990 | ||
Eleventh International Economic History Congress | Milan, Italy | September 1994 | ||
Twelfth International Economic History Congress | Madrid, Spain | August 1998 | ||
XIII Congress of the International Economic History Association | Buenos Aires, Argentina | 22–26 July 2002 | ||
XIV International Economic History Congress | Helsinki, Finland | 21–25 August 2006 | ||
XV World Economic History Congress | Utrecht, Netherlands | 3–7 August 2009 | ||
XVI World Economic History Congress | “The Roots of Development” | Stellenbosch, South Africa | 9–13 July 2012 | |
XVII World Economic History Congress | “Diversity in Development” | Kyoto, Japan | 3–7 August 2015 | |
XVIII World Economic History Congress | “Waves of Globalization” | Boston, Massachusetts, USA | 29 July – 3 August 2018 | |
XIX World Economic History Congress | "Resources" | Paris, France | 25–30 July 2021 |