ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Ogilvie

I have been exceptionally fortunate to have so many friends and colleagues who gave their energy, time, and ideas to help improve this book. My special thanks go to Jeremy Edwards, who read several drafts, provided detailed comments, and encouraged me to say what I thought. I am very grateful to Joel Mokyr for inviting me to write the book, being patient with its long gestation, and showing incisively why criticism is a scholar’s best friend. In addition to providing intelligent and generous comments on the entire manuscript, Mathieu Arnoux shed particularly illuminating light on France and feudalism; Andrea Caracausi on Italy, quality control, and skills; Karel Davids on the Netherlands, apprenticeship, and technology; Erik Lindberg on Scandinavia, growth, and public institutions; Ulrich Pfister on proto-industry and central Europe; Francesca Trivellato on generalized institutions and discrimination; and Bas van Bavel on corporative-seigneurial relations and the methodological value of explicitly analyzing the characteristics of “the biggest guild database ever compiled”. Maria Ågren and Danielle van den Heuvel were so kind as to make very detailed and perceptive comments on the chapters relating to the political framework and to women’s economic position. I am grateful to Steve Broadberry for an absorbing discussion of the most recent revisions to long-term historical estimates of European per capita GDP. A large number of friends and colleagues who work on the economic history of gender provided well-informed feedback on how guilds treated women; among them I would especially like to thank Anna Bellavitis and Judith Bennett for perspicacious comments on the chapter about guilds and women, Amy Erickson for advice and data on English female apprenticeship, and Ariadne Schmidt for clarifying mixed-sex guilds in the Netherlands.

I also take great pleasure in thanking the following friends and colleagues for stimulating conversations about particular aspects of the book, reactions to its arguments, and suggestions for further research: Daron Acemoglu, David Autor, Ying Bai, Alexi Baker, Marco Belfanti, Heinz Berger, Wim Blockmans, Marcel Boldorf, Jeremy Boulton, Chris Briggs, André Carus, Markus Cerman, Pierre-André Chiappori, Albrecht Cordes, Ron Couwenhoven, Guillaume Daudin, Roland Deigendesch, Tracy Dennison, Jan de Vries, Jessica Dijkman, David Do Paço, Jean-Pierre Dormois, Lars Edgren, Sepp Ehmer, Christiane Eisenberg, Giovanni Favero, Klaus Fischer, Laurence Fontaine, Oscar Gelderblom, Jessica Goldberg, Alberto Guenzi, Tim Guinnane, John Guthrie, Daryl Hafter, John Henderson, Sigrid Hirbodian, Ulrike Horstmann-Guthrie, Maria Hidvegi, Anton Howes, Margaret Hunt, Pavla Jirková, Emily Kadens, Alexander Klein, Tomáš Klír, Mia Korpiola, Mark Koyama, Markus Küpker, Paola Lanaro, Patrick Lantschner, Dag Lindström, Jonas Lindström, Sofia Ling, Jan Lucassen, Paolo Malanima, Julie Marfany, Lenka Matušíková, Eduard Maur, Deirdre McCloskey, Philippe Minard, Flavio Miranda, Craig Muldrew, John Munro, Travis Ng, Klas Nyberg, David Ong, Geoffrey Parker, Christopher Pihl, Natasha Postel-Vinay, Hanna Ostholm, Heikki Pihlajamäki, Maarten Prak, Cristina Prytz, Cedric Quertier, Prateek Raj, François Rivière, Hrefna Róbertsdóttir, Jim Robinson, Wouter Ryckbosch, Göran Rydén, Tom Safley, Patrick Schmidt, Nathan Schneider, Raphaelle Schwarzberg, Hamish Scott, Tom Scott, Paul Seabright, Kim Siebenhühner, Hannah Skoda, Simon Smith, Richard M. Smith, Peter Solar, Hugo Soly, Peter Spufford, Annemarie Steidl, Judy Stephenson, John Styles, Tim Taylor, James Thomson, Michael Toch, Jaume Torras Elias, Claudia Ulbrich, Jelle van Lottum, Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk, Patrick Wallis, Martin Weale, Anne Wegener-Sleeswijk, Christine Werkstetter, Merry Wiesner, Tony Wrigley, Lingwei Wu, Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz, Heide Wunder, and Beatrice Zucca Micheletto.

I am grateful to the editors of the Journal of Economic Perspectives for inviting me to write an article discussing these findings on the economics of guilds in 2014, and to the Figuerola Institute for inviting me to deliver the 2016 Figuerola Lecture, which used the example of European guilds to answer the question, “How Do Bad Institutions Survive?”.

Finally, I would like to thank the many economists and historians who have engaged with these arguments at seminars, conferences, and lectures over the years, eloquently demonstrating that, within a framework of generalized institutions, a community of individuals pursuing the same occupation can indeed generate social capital that benefits everyone.