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26 Const. Pol. Econ. 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/constpe26 and id is 1 raw text is: Const Polit Econ (2015) 26:1 3
DOI 10.1007/s10602-015-9186-2
Introduction: a new perspective on modern German
history
Steven B. Webb - Joachim Zweynert
Published online: 14 January 2015
© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2015
Heinrich Winkler's two volume history of Germany in the nineteenth and twentieth
century is titled Der lange Weg nach Westen. For him, 'nach Westen' means
becoming a Western democracy, like England, France and the US. How did they do it?
Douglass North, John Wallis, and Barry Weingast, in their book Violence and
Social Orders: a Framework for Interpreting Recorded Human History (2009), take
up the question of how countries make such a transition. The framework is that of
limited and open access orders (LAO/OAO), as explained in Steven Webb's article
in this issue. Although they intend the framework for universal application, most of
the North, Wallis, and Weingast book focuses on the economic and political history
of England, the US, and France from early modern times up to the end of the
nineteenth century-the times when these three countries became Western capitalist
democracies as we think of them today. Violence and Social Orders does not discuss
the twentieth and twenty-first centuries or the cases of Germany and Russia, the
other big players in modern European history.
The articles here apply the limited and OAO framework to the history of
Germany in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, for two purposes. First, they
shed new light on the German political and economic history by looking through a
comparative lens. Was Germany's evolution so unique-a Sonderweg-or was it a
later variant on similar themes? Second, the articles show how the framework needs
augmenting to take account of an important case like that of Germany. For instance,
in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, while it was still a limited access
order, the German economy was able to grow as fast or faster than the main OAO
economies of the time and to surpass them on many technological frontiers, which is
contrary to the prediction implicit in Violence and Social Orders. Also, the
S. B. Webb - J. Zweynert (E)
Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany
e-mail: joachim.zweynert@uni-wh.de

I Springer

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