Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T19:11:39.148Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2023

ANDREW POPP*
Affiliation:
Copenhagen Business School
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Introduction
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

Welcome to Volume 23, No. 4 of Enterprise and Society. This issue marks the end of my second term as Editor-in-Chief at the journal. It has been agreed that I will serve a third term. This is a role I continue to derive great satisfaction and enjoyment from and I feel honored by the continuing trust of the Business History Conference, our authors, reviewers, and—far from least—readers. I believe that the journal has been going from strength to strength in recent years and I will devote all my energies to maintaining that trajectory.

As always, this issue carries the Presidential Address and the Krooss Prize summaries. This year’s Presidential Address was given by Andrea Lluch on the topic of “Embracing Complexity and Diversity in Business History: A Latin American Perspective.” There were four Krooss Prize finalists in 2022: Bench Ansfield on “Born in Flames: Arson, Racial Capitalism, and the Reinsuring of the Bronx in the Late Twentieth Century;” Ian Kumekawa on.

“Imperial Schemes: Empire and the Rise of the British Business-State, 1914-1939;” Andrey Shlyakhter on “Smuggler States: Poland, Latvia, Estonia, and Contraband Trade Across the Soviet Frontier, 1919-1924;” and Hannah Knox Tucker on “Masters of the Market: Ship Captaincy in the British Atlantic, 1680-1774.” As ever, these summaries demonstrate quality and originality of the work being done by our community of emerging scholars. This year’s Krooss Prize was awarded to Bench Ansfield.

Alongside these regular features this issue carries a rich suite of seven full research articles that take us from medieval England to twentieth-century Australia via the early-modern Atlantic World, the Irish Republic, the Netherlands, Miami, and Detroit (incidentally, the destination for the Business History Conference annual meeting in 2023). Once more, via the Presidential Address, the Krooss Prize summaries, and this spread of articles, I feel confident that Enterprise and Society is more than fulfilling its mission to represent and expand the depth and breadth of business history research.

As is traditional in the introduction to the final issue of the year I want to express my heartfelt thanks to a number of people. There are, of course, our Associate Editors—Shane Hamilton, Per Hansen, Andrea Lluch, and Sharon Murphy—as well as the full Editorial Board. As always, I am deeply in debt to Carol Lockman of the Hagley Library for editorial assistance, to Adam Albright, also of the Hagley Library, for his ever wonderful cover designs, and to Roger Horowitz and Vicki Howard as BHC Treasurer and Secretary respectively for their continuous support. For various reasons, there has been more work than normal over the last twelve months for the Print Media Oversight Committee, which has comprised Xavier Duran, Marc Levinson, and Julia Yongue (Chair this year). I remain deeply appreciate of the colleagues we work with at Cambridge University Press. For once I want to mention a specific name, Brian Mazeski, who has recently moved on from his role as Senior Content Manager. For several years Brian has been our principal point of contact at the press. It has been a wonderful working relationship and the timely appearance of the journal has owed as much to Brian as to any other individual. Finally, last but far from least, our thanks to our authors, for submitting such stimulating work, to our readers, for their continuing appetite for the best new work, and to our reviewers for their unstinting labor. This Introduction closes by listing the names of those who have served as reviewers over the last twelve months.

Cécile Armand

Matthew Bailey

Erik Baker

Grace Ballor

Victoria Barnes

Akram Benjamin

Robert Bennett

Eloisa Betti

Carolyn Biltoft

Carlo Brambilla,

Blake Brown

Marcelo Bucheli

Sverre Christensen

Sally Clarke

Damian Clavel

Chris Corker

Mila Davids

Abe De Jong

Austin Dean

Pierre Desrochers

Alexa Dietrich

Pierre-Yves Donzé

Thomas DuBois

Samuel Edquist

Pierre Eichenberger

Sarah Elvins

Maria Fernandez-Moya

James Fichter

Xaq Frohlich

Amy Friode

Eric Godelier

Leigh Gardner

Valeria Giacomin

Ewan Gibbs

Thibaud Giddey

Erik Green

John Handel

Julie Hardwick

Gregory Hargreaves

Emma Hart

Ellen Hartigan-O’Connor

Colin Haslam

David Higgins

Derek Hoff

Jane Humphries

Orsi Husz

Owen Hymen

Nigel Jackson

Sophie Jones

Heather Joshi

Emery Kalema

Sven Kube

Arun Kumar

Pamela Laird

Joe Lane

Carlos Larrinaga

Mats Larsson

Jessica Levy

Ida Lunde Jørgensen

Karen Maher

Carles Manera

Emily Masghati

David Mason

Catherine Medici

Ashton Merck

Jacob Metzer

Ghassan Moazzin

Simon Mollan

Duncan Money

Jonathan Morris

Retief Muller

Mary-Elizabeth Murphy

Benjamin Möckel

Pius Nyambara

David Nye

Vanessa Ogle

Jari Ojala

Diana Paton

Robin Pearson

Jason Petrulis

Jamie Pietruska

Leon Prieto

William Quinn

Aparajith Ramnath

Erika Rappaport

Milagros Rodriquez

Roy Tirthankar

Matthew Schauer

Janick Schaufelbuehl

Michael Schiltz

Peter Scott

Rebecca Sharpless

Andrew Smith

Anna Soulsby

Joshua Specht

Christian Stutz

Lakshmi Subramanian

Timothy Taylor

Steven Topik

Geoffrey Traugh

Chibuike Uche

Shawn Van Ausdal

Christoph Viebig

Mattie Webb

Shawn Van Ausdal

John Wong

Nicholas Wong

Chenxiao Xia

Dong Yan

Timon de Groot

Lourens van Haaften

Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk