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Das landwirtschaftliche Betriebsproblem in der deutschen Nationalökonomie bis zur Mitte des XIX. Jahrhunderts

1911

by Cronbach

AgricultureEconomic HistoryPhysiocracyLudwig von MisesProperty RightsThomas AquinasAristotleDemographyCapital TheoryFiscal PolicyAdam SmithClassical EconomicsDivision of LaborEconomies of ScaleIndustrial RevolutionMercantilismInheritancePrice TheoryTaxationLand ReformJohann Heinrich von ThunenGround RentCapital IntensityHistorical SchoolWilhelm RoscherPolitical EconomyNational IncomeFriedrich ListPovertyLaissez-faireGeorg Wilhelm Friedrich HegelAnthropologyCorporatismProletariatMonetary TheoryDavid RicardoJean Charles Léonard de SismondiInterventionismIncome DistributionSocialism

Table of Contents · 79 segments

1
Front Matter, Library Marks, and Title Pagesessay
2
Table of Contentsessay
3
Prefaceessay
4
Introduction: Farm Size, Ownership, and Land Division Before the Modern Debatetheoretical
5
First Book, First Section, Chapter I §1: Early Remarks on Farm Size Before the Mid-Eighteenth Centurychapter
6
Chapter I §2: Populationism, Seckendorff, and the Rise of Domain Divisionchapter
7
Chapter I §3: Early Projects of Domain Dismemberment in Saxony, Brandenburg-Prussia, and Hanoverchapter
8
Chapter I §4: Populationist and Cameralist Arguments for Small and Medium Farmschapter
9
Justi’s Early and Later Defense of Small Farmingchapter
10
The Revival of the Domain-Dismemberment Debate and A. S. v. Z.’s Proposalchapter
11
Justi’s Adoption and Extension of Domain Conversion into Peasant Farmschapter
12
Pfeiffer on Small Holdings, Labor Scarcity, and Domain Divisionchapter
13
Later Cameralists on Estate Division: Baumann, Sonnenfels, Jung-Stilling, and Löwechapter
14
Chapter III opening: Butschek and Zauschner on Bohemian estate divisionchapter
15
Oeder and Rantzau on Schleswig-Holstein estate dismemberment and peasant freedomchapter
16
Heinrich Arnold Lange on domain breakup, peasant holdings, and fiscal interestschapter
17
Mayer and Swedish influences on the division of large peasant farmschapter
18
Synthesis of German cameralist views on farm size and the case for small cultivationchapter
19
Chapter IV opening: Prussian government policy on domains, colonization, and farm divisionchapter
20
Domain dismemberment in smaller German states and Schleswig-Holsteinchapter
21
Austrian policy: Bestiftungszwang, Raab’s system, and robot abolitionchapter
22
Second Part heading: Foreign literature and its influence on Germanychapter
23
Foreign Treatment of the Farm-Size Problem: Quesnay and the Physiocratic Turnchapter
24
Adam Smith on Landed Estates, Small Proprietors, Domains, and Gross versus Net Revenuetheoretical
25
Arthur Young’s Empirical and Theoretical Defense of Large Farmstheoretical
26
New Elements Introduced by French and English Literature into the Farm-Size Debateessay
27
Physiocracy in Germany: Schlettwein on Maximum Gross Yield and Minimum Farm Sizechapter
28
Herrenschwand’s Relative Agriculture, Manufactures, and Large-Farm Argumenttheoretical
29
Christian Jakob Kraus on Farm Extent, Net Return, and State Domainstheoretical
30
Assessment of German Physiocratic Influence and the Shift Back toward Smithessay
31
The Free Divisibility Debate and the Breaking Up of Peasant Holdingschapter
32
Winkler’s Prize Essay in Defense of Free Division of Peasant Farmstheoretical
33
Free divisibility, small holdings, and Meerwein’s critiquechapter
34
Restricted peasant estate division and Reinbold’s opposition to domain dismembermentchapter
35
Private dominion dismemberment from Wichmann to Merkel and Magnichapter
36
Opposition to Merkel and the 1804 Silesian dismemberment lawchapter
37
Second Book opening: nineteenth-century economic approachchapter
38
Agricultural Teachers Thaer and Schwerz on Large and Small Farmschapter
39
Adam Smith’s German Successors: Soden, Jacob, Lotz, and Buquoijchapter
40
Physiocratic Echoes and the Opening of Rau’s Theory of Agricultural Farm Sizechapter
41
Rau on Marketable Surplus, Free Division, and Minimum Farm Sizetheoretical
42
Hanssen’s Critique of Rau and the Relativity of Farm Sizetheoretical
43
Koppe on the Practical Economics of Large and Small Farmstheoretical
44
Thünen’s Brief Remarks on Farm Size in the Isolated Statetheoretical
45
Hundeshagen on Psychological Differences Between Large Estates and Peasant Farmschapter
46
Helferich and Schenk on Württemberg, Small Holdings, and Regulated Divisiontheoretical
47
Lavergne-Peguilhen’s Conservative Critique of the Prussian Agrarian Reformschapter
48
Hering and Lette Defend Free Land Division in Prussian Agrarian Policytheoretical
49
Chapter VII §1: Ernst Engel and Livestock Statisticschapter
50
Chapter VII §2: Other Mid-Century Writers on Farm Size and Divisibilitychapter
51
Chapter VII §3: Wilhelm Roscher on Farm-Size Mixture and Historical Developmentchapter
52
Second Part Introduction: The Older Historical-Political Directionchapter
53
Justus Möser’s Social-Political Defense of Hereditary Farmschapter
54
Freiherr von Stein on Land Mobilization, Peasant Protection, and Noble Fideicommissachapter
55
Niebuhr and Arndt on Peasant Estates, Inheritance, and Rural Proletarianizationchapter
56
Adam Müller on Entailed Landownership, Nobility, and Isolated Agriculturechapter
57
Haller and Haxthausen on Feudal Land Tenure and the Agrarian Constitutionchapter
58
Synthesis of the Historical-Political Agrarian View and Transition to the Economic-Political Directionchapter
59
From Soden to Rumohr: Political-Economic Arguments on Land Distributionchapter
60
Robert von Mohl on Unequal Land Distribution and State Policychapter
61
Bühlau to Schüz: Free Division, Medium Holdings, and the Effects of Large Estateschapter
62
Schüz and List on Estate Size, Free Divisibility, and Agrarian Politicstheoretical
63
Chapter II: Mid-Nineteenth-Century Debate on Free Divisibility and Closed Holdingschapter
64
Kosegarten against the Mobilization of Landtheoretical
65
Reichensperger’s Defense of the Free Agrarian Constitutiontheoretical
66
Reichensperger on Free Agrarian Constitution, State Order, and Legal Justicetheoretical
67
The Newer Historical-Political Direction: Hegel and Stahl on Landownershipchapter
68
Hegelian and Stahlian Agrarian Conservatism: Ludwig Wilhelm Funkechapter
69
Bülow-Cummerow and Grävell on Estates, Nobility, and Landed Propertychapter
70
Karl von Sparre’s State-Centered Theory of Landholding and Farm Sizechapter
71
Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl on Peasants, Nobility, and Conservative Social Orderchapter
72
Assessment of the Historical-Political School on Agrarian Propertychapter
73
Bernhardi’s Critique: Large Estates, Net Yield, and Classical Economicschapter
74
Bernhardi on Arguments for Small Propertychapter
75
Bernhardi on Free Divisibility, Fragmentation, and Historical Evidencechapter
76
Bernhardi’s Conclusions and Significance for the Farm-Size Debatechapter
77
Concluding Reflections on the Development of the Agricultural Operating Problemessay
78
Bibliography of Works Usedbibliography
79
Persons and Citations Indexbibliography