1st Edition
Mercantilism, Account Keeping and the Periphery-Core Relationship
Introduction. Mercantilism and Accounting Across Space and Time, Cheryl S. McWatters. Part One: Pre-Market Intermediaries and Indigenous Players. 1 Jesuit Account Books and their Role in Connecting Worlds, Frederik Vermote. 2 ‘But whatever were the honey in the mouth of that beast of trade, there was a deadly sting in the tail’: New Netherland’s Monetary Policy and the Coastal Algonquian Pragmatic Response during the Seventeenth Century, Mario Schmidt. Part Two: Encounters with the Periphery. 3 European Merchant Trading Firms and the Export of the Precious Metals from the Kingdom of Bohemia during the Sixteenth Century, Petr Vorel. 4 Trade, Truck, Custom and Barter – Glimpses from Slave-trade Cargoes, Cheryl S. McWatters and Yannick Lemarchand. Part Three: Production, Consumption, and Management of the Colonial Economy. 5 Glimpses of an Indigenous Economy: Patterns of Consumption and Production of Indigenous Peoples in the Nineteenth Century Fur Trade and Whaling Industry, Leanna Parker. 6 Economic Intelligence and Fur Trade Management by the Hudson’s Bay Company: An Examination of District Reports in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries, Arthur J. Ray. 7 Native Labour and Imperial Consumption on the Periphery of Empire as revealed by the York Factory Account Books of the Hudson’s Bay Company, c. 1869-1870, Frank J. Tough. Conclusion. 8 Accounting, Money and Mercantilism in European Exchange, 1500-1900, Richard W. Unger
Biography
Cheryl Susan McWatters is the Father Edgar Thivierge Chair in Business History and professor of accounting, at the University of Ottawa, Canada. She holds a PhD in Management from Queen’s University, Canada and her research interests span accounting, business and economic history, management accounting and control, and operations management. She is also the editor of Accounting History Review, and associate editor of the Journal of Operations Management.






