Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines

Economic history has been for a long time a meeting place for historians and economists, then a deserted land, for want of a language shared by all. It is now reinvested by model-makers, without a real interdisciplinary exchange being initiated. On the basis of examples relating to European economic...

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Main Author: Mathieu Arnoux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Recherche & Régulation 2020-01-01
Series:Revue de la Régulation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/regulation/15672
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author Mathieu Arnoux
author_facet Mathieu Arnoux
author_sort Mathieu Arnoux
collection DOAJ
description Economic history has been for a long time a meeting place for historians and economists, then a deserted land, for want of a language shared by all. It is now reinvested by model-makers, without a real interdisciplinary exchange being initiated. On the basis of examples relating to European economic history in the 11th and 12th centuries, it is proposed to reopen the dialogue between the two communities by showing that the use of different modes of demonstration does not prevent historians from adequately describing the transformation processes or economists to use it as an experimental field where to put their concepts to the test. It is also suggested that the lack of coïncidence in vocabularies is no obstacle to interdisciplinary dialogue.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1957-7796
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spelling doaj-art-21706a52e71d406597bf00d8be0c4a0a2025-01-30T14:26:43ZengAssociation Recherche & RégulationRevue de la Régulation1957-77962020-01-012610.4000/regulation.15672Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporainesMathieu ArnouxEconomic history has been for a long time a meeting place for historians and economists, then a deserted land, for want of a language shared by all. It is now reinvested by model-makers, without a real interdisciplinary exchange being initiated. On the basis of examples relating to European economic history in the 11th and 12th centuries, it is proposed to reopen the dialogue between the two communities by showing that the use of different modes of demonstration does not prevent historians from adequately describing the transformation processes or economists to use it as an experimental field where to put their concepts to the test. It is also suggested that the lack of coïncidence in vocabularies is no obstacle to interdisciplinary dialogue.https://journals.openedition.org/regulation/15672institutionsgrowthtransitionMiddle Agesresourcesrenewable systems
spellingShingle Mathieu Arnoux
Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines
Revue de la Régulation
institutions
growth
transition
Middle Ages
resources
renewable systems
title Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines
title_full Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines
title_fullStr Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines
title_full_unstemmed Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines
title_short Ressources renouvelables et croissance économique : suggestions médiévales et questions contemporaines
title_sort ressources renouvelables et croissance economique suggestions medievales et questions contemporaines
topic institutions
growth
transition
Middle Ages
resources
renewable systems
url https://journals.openedition.org/regulation/15672
work_keys_str_mv AT mathieuarnoux ressourcesrenouvelablesetcroissanceeconomiquesuggestionsmedievalesetquestionscontemporaines