Capital Women
The European Marriage Pattern, Female Empowerment and Economic Development in Western Europe 1300-1800
Jan Luiten van Zanden and Sarah Carmichael
Tine De Moor
Reviews and Awards
"Women matter! Capital Women is a strong and compelling book. It will be of the upmost interest for all those who wish to understand the ongoing debate about the historical role played by women in economic growth, progress, and development in Western Europe." - Claude Diebolt, CNRS Research Professor of Economics at the University of Strasbourg
"Development economists have long argued that if free to act for themselves and their families, women can contribute to growth and development; indeed the need to empower women has become a staple of development policy. Capital Women will help economic historians get up to date in understanding how women's agency can be seen as crucial to the development of Western Europe. Jan Luiten van Zanden, Tine De Moor, and Sarah Carmichael use a wide range of measures of economic activity, including their original "Girlpower-Index", to measure female agency and autonomy and then link these to the dynamics of development. Capital Women brings "Girlpower" into the economic historians' mainstream." - Jane Humphries, Centennial Professor, London School of Economics and Emeritus Professor of Economic History, Oxford University
"This book addresses from new angles the old debate on the origins, the characteristics and the consequences of the European Marriage Pattern. It makes a very substantial and timely contribution to our knowledge of preindustrial societies - and it will surely inspire research and solicit debate for years to come." - Guido Alfani, Bocconi University