Nova School of Business and Economics

Business History

Code

1209

Academic unit

null

Department

null

Credits

7,5

Teacher in charge

Luciano Amaral

Teaching language

English

Objectives

This course provides an overview on the historical formation of the modern enterprise. This analysis is put in a comparative perspective, assessing the importance of the modern corporation in different countries. This course also examines the development of multinationals and the international business since the mid-nineteenth century. Furthermore, the relation between state and firm is put in an historical perspective, considering not only the different forms of regulation, but also the rise and decline of the state-owned enterprise. Finally, corporate finance, marketing, operations management, and human resources as different functional areas of the firm are studied in an historical perspective.

Prerequisites

N/A

Subject matter


1. Introduction

2. Tradition and innovation: the business firm and the Industrial Revolution

3. The advent of the modern industrial enterprise (1850-1914)

4. Comparative approach to business structures over time and across space

5. The functions of the firm: an historical perspective

6. Business in motion

7. Business and state

8. The modern firm: summary and prospective

Bibliography

Amatori, F. and A. Colli (2011), Business History: Complexities and Comparisons. London: Routledge.
Blackford, M. G. (1998), The Rise of Modern Business in Great Britain, the United States and Japan. Chapel Hill: The Univ. of North Carolina Press.
Chandler Jr., A. D. (1977), The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business. Cambridge MA: Harvard Univ. Press.
Chandler Jr., A. D. (1989), Scale and Scope. The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism. Cambridge MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Chandler Jr., A. D., F. Amatori and T. Hikino (eds.) (1997), Big Business and the Wealth of Nations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jones, G. (2005), Multinationals and global capitalism: from the nineteenth to the twenty first century. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
Jones, G. and J. Zeitlin (2008), The Oxford Handbook of Business History. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
Toninelli, P. A. (ed.) (2000), The Rise and Fall of State-Owned Enterprise in the Western World. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press

Teaching method

Evaluation method

The assessment will be based on the following items:
1.Presentation in class (20 %);
2.Written essay (25%)
3.Business Goes to the movie (5%)
4.Discussion participation (10%)
5.Final exam (40%)
To pass the course, students must get at least 9.0 (over 20) in the final exam.

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