Marine insurance in the Netherlands 1600-1870 : a comparative institutional approach
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Bibliographic Information
Marine insurance in the Netherlands 1600-1870 : a comparative institutional approach
Aksant, 2009
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Note
Bibliography: p. 306-318
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Marine insurance has been of great importance to the expansion of long distance trade and economic growth in the early modern period, in particular for seafaring nations such as the Dutch Republic. The Amsterdam market became Europe's leading insurance market and within the Republic other insurance systems also emerged. Little is known about the differing institutional frameworks governing these industries and the interaction between the institutions and the actors in the industry. This study will examine the development of marine insurance in the Netherlands in Amsterdam, Rotterdam and the province of Groningen from c. 1600 to 1870 from an institutional point of view. It will examine how the behaviour of authorities, insurers, underwriters and brokers was affected by the formal and informal constraints of the industry and how in turn their conduct has influenced the institutional framework and induced institutional change. A comparative institutional analysis will be made of three insurance systems in the Netherlands, each with its own distinctive characteristics. The interaction between institutions and actors will be studied in relation to the effects of technological innovations and international geo-political changes. By examining developments over a period of two and half centuries the path of long-term institutional change becomes discernable.
Table of Contents
Marine Insurance in the Netherlands 1600-1870 - 2[-]Contents - 6[-]List of tables, graphs and maps - 8[-]Abbrevations - 9[-]Acknowledgements - 10[-]Chapter 1 Introduction - 14[-]Chapter 2 Groningen:mutual interests and financial innovation in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries - 32[-]Chapter 3 Amsterdam:individuals, ineffectual regulations and intricate balances of power in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries - 62[-]Chapter 4 Rotterdam: commercial and political collusion in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries - 160[-]Chapter 5: Conclusion - 272[-]Samenvatting(summary in Dutch) - 290[-]Archival Sources - 304[-]Index - 320
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