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Jonathan Pritchett
Jonathan Pritchett
Professor of Economics, Tulane University
Verified email at tulane.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
The domestic United States slave trade: New evidence
H Freudenberger, JB Pritchett
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 21 (3), 447-477, 1991
661991
A peculiar sample: The selection of slaves for the New Orleans market
JB Pritchett, H Freudenberger
The Journal of Economic History 52 (1), 109-127, 1992
561992
Selection in the market for slaves: New Orleans, 1830–1860
JB Pritchett, RM Chamberlain
The Quarterly Journal of Economics 108 (2), 461-473, 1993
551993
Betting on secession: Quantifying political events surrounding slavery and the civil war
CW Calomiris, J Pritchett
American Economic Review 106 (01), 1-23, 2016
522016
Quantitative estimates of the United States interregional slave trade, 1820–1860
JB Pritchett
The Journal of Economic History 61 (2), 467-475, 2001
452001
Strangers′ disease: determinants of yellow fever mortality during the new orleans epidemic of 1853
JB Pritchett, I Tunali
Explorations in Economic History 32 (4), 517-539, 1995
401995
The burden of negro schooling: tax incidence and racial redistribution in postbellum North Carolina
JB Pritchett
The Journal of Economic History 49 (4), 966-973, 1989
371989
Cox regression with alternative concepts of waiting time: The New Orleans yellow fever epidemic of 1853
I Tunali, JB Pritchett
Journal of Applied Econometrics 12 (1), 1-25, 1997
321997
The interregional slave trade and the selection of slaves for the New Orleans market
JB Pritchett
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 28 (1), 57-85, 1997
311997
Roundtable of reviews for the half has never been told
JE Murray, A Olmstead, T Logan, JB Pritchett, PL Rousseau
Journal of Economic History 75, 919, 2015
28*2015
Preserving Slave Families for Profit: Traders' Incentives and Pricing in the New Orleans Slave Market
CW Calomiris, JB Pritchett
The Journal of Economic History 69 (4), 986-1011, 2009
262009
The in-hospital mortality rates of slaves and freemen: Evidence from Touro Infirmary, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1855–1860
J Pritchett, MS Yun
Explorations in Economic History 46 (2), 241-252, 2009
202009
When to care: the economic rationale of slavery health care provision
K Lander, J Pritchett
Social Science History 33 (2), 155-182, 2009
172009
When to care: the economic rationale of slavery health care provision
K Lander, J Pritchett
Social Science History 33 (2), 155-182, 2009
172009
The racial division of education expenditures in the South, 1910
JB Pritchett
The Journal of Economic History 47 (2), 491-493, 1987
131987
North Carolina’s public schools: Growth and local taxation
JB Pritchett
Social Science History 9 (3), 277-291, 1985
131985
On the marital status of us slaves: Evidence from touro infirmary, new orleans, louisiana
TD Logan, JB Pritchett
Explorations in Economic History 69, 50-63, 2018
122018
The occupations of slaves sold in New Orleans: Missing values, cheap talk, or informative advertising?
J Pritchett, J Hayes
Cliometrica 10, 181-195, 2016
82016
A peculiar sample: A reply to Steckel and Ziebarth
J Pritchett, H Freudenberger
The Journal of Economic History 76 (1), 139-162, 2016
82016
Sequential sales as a test of adverse selection in the market for slaves
J Pritchett, M Smith
The Journal of Economic History 73 (2), 477-497, 2013
72013
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