Hodge, Mary G. (1996). Political organization of the central provinces. In Michael E.Smith and Frances F.Berdan (Eds), Aztec imperial strategies (pp. 13–46). Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1996. Hodges, Richard. (1989). Dark age economics: The origins oftown and trade A. D. 600-1000. London: Gerald Duckworth & Company.
Hodges, Richard, and Whitehouse, David. (1983). Mohammed, Charlemagne, & the origins of Europe: Archeology and the Pirenne hypothesis. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Hoffman, Philip Т., and Rosenthal, Jean-Laurent. (2000). New work in French economic history. French Historical Studies, 23 (3), 439–453.
Hofstadter, Richard. (1969). The idea of a party system. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Holmes, George. (1957). The estates of the higher nobility in fourteenth — century England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Holt, MichaelF. (1978). The political crisis ofthe 1850s. New York: John Wiley and Sons.
Holt, MichaelF. (1999). The rise and fall of the American Whig party: Jacksonian politics and the onset of the CivilWar. New York: Oxford University Press.
Hoyle, R. W. (Ed.). (1992). The estates ofthe English crown, 1558–1640. NewYork: Cambridge University Press,
Hughes, J. R. T. (1976). Social control in the colonial economy. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
Hughes, J.R T. (1977). What difference did the beginning make? American Economic Review, 67 (1), 15–20.
Hume, David. (1987 [1777]). Essays: Moral, political, and literary. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund.
Hurst, James Willard (1964). Law and the conditions of freedom in the nineteenth-century United States, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
Hurst, James Willard. (1980).
The legitimacy ofthe business corporation. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.Hurstfield, Joel (1949). Lord Burghley as master of the court of wards,
1598. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, Fourth Series, 31, 95-114.
Hurstfield, Joel. (1953). Corruption and reform under Edward VI and Mary: The example of wardship. English Historical Review, 68 (266), 22–36.
Hurstfield, Joel. (1955). The profits of fiscal feudalism, 1541–1602. Economic History Review, New Series, 8 (1), 53–61.
Iversen, Torben. (2005). Capitalism, democracy, and welfare. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Iversen, Torben, and Soskice, David. (2001). An asset theory of social policy preferences. American Political Science Review, 95 (4): 875–893.
Jha, Saumitra. (2008, August), «Shares, coalition formation and political development: evidence from 17th century England», Stanford GSB Research Paper No. 2005.
John, Eric. (1960). Land tenure in early England: A discussion of some problems. Welwyn Garden City: Leicester University Press.
Johnson, Allen W., and Earle, Timothy. (2000). The evolution of hum an societies, 2nd edition. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Johnson, Gregory A. (1982). Organizational structure and scalar stress. In Colin Renfrew, Michael J. Rowlands, and Barbara Abbott Seg- raves (Eds), Theory and explanation in archaeology. New York: Academic Press.
Jones, Eric. (1981). The European miracle. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Jones, J. R. (1972). The revolution of 1688 in England. New York: W. W. Norton.
Kantorowicz, Ernst H. (1997 [1957]). The king’s two bodies: A study in mediaeval political theology. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Katzenstein, Peter. (1985). Small states in world markets: Industrial policy in Europe. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Keefer, Philip. (2004). Democratization and clientelism: Why are young democracies badly governed? Development Research Group, World Bank Working Paper Series No. 3594.
Keefer, Philip, and Vlaicu, Razvan. (2005, January). Democracy, credibility and clientelism. World Bank Working Paper 3472.
Keely, Lawrence H. (1996). War before civilization. New York: Oxford University Press.
Keller, Morton. (2007). America’s three regimes: A new political history. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Kelly, Robert L. (1995). The foraging spectrum: Diversity in hunter-gather- er lifeways. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.
Kennedy, David M. (1999). Freedom from fear: The American people in depression and war, 1929–1945. New York: Oxford University Press.
Kettering, Sharon. (1986). Patrons, brokers, and clients in seventeenth-cen- tury France. New York: Oxford University Press.
Keyssar, Alexander. (2000). The right to vote: The contested history of democracy in America. New York: Basic Books.
Khan, Mushtaq. (2004). State failure in developing countries and institutional reform strategies. Annual World Bank Conference on Development Economics — Europe 2003. Washington, DC: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank.
Khan, Mushtaq. (2005). Markets, states, and democracy: Patron — client networks and the case for democracy in developing countries. Democratization, 12 (5), 704–724.