‘Big Data’ in Economic History

2018
Journal of Economic History 78(1): 268-299. Co-authored with Myron P. Gutmann and Evan Roberts.

Big data is an exciting prospect for the field of economic history, which has long depended on the acquisition, keying, and cleaning of scarce numerical information about the past. This article examines two areas in which economic historians are already using big data – population and environment – discussing ways in which increased frequency of observation, denser samples, and smaller geographic units allow us to analyze the past with greater precision and often to track individuals, places, and phenomena across time. We also explore promising new sources of big data: organically created economic data, high resolution images, and textual corpora.

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When did Americans Stop Marrying Their Cousins? (Interviewed by Steph Yin)