# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | A theory for formation of large empires | Journal of Global History | 2009 | 220 |
2 | Historiographical traditions and modern imperatives for the restoration of global history | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 211 |
3 | Indian Ocean Studies and the ‘new thalassology’ | Journal of Global History | 2007 | 165 |
4 | Global history and the spatial turn: from the impact of area studies to the study of critical junctures of globalization | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 161 |
5 | Discussion: the futures of global history | Journal of Global History | 2018 | 161 |
6 | Editorial – Zomia and beyond | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 125 |
7 | The use of global abstractions: national income accounting in the period of imperial decline | Journal of Global History | 2011 | 117 |
8 | Indian Nationalism and the ‘world forces’: transnational and diasporic dimensions of the Indian freedom movement on the eve of the First World War | Journal of Global History | 2007 | 104 |
9 | The Spanish Empire and its legacy: fiscal redistribution and political conflict in colonial and post-colonial Spanish America | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 96 |
10 | A British sea: making sense of global space in the late nineteenth century | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 95 |
11 | Transnational intellectual cooperation, the League of Nations, and the problem of order | Journal of Global History | 2011 | 91 |
12 | Global rust belt: Hemileia vastatrix and the ecological integration of world coffee production since 1850 | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 88 |
13 | The worldwide economic impact of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 1793–1815 | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 86 |
14 | The mobility transition revisited, 1500–1900: what the case of Europe can offer to global history | Journal of Global History | 2009 | 85 |
15 | Disease, diplomacy and international commerce: the origins of international sanitary regulation in the nineteenth century | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 77 |
16 | Are the Central Himalayas in Zomia? Some scholarly and political considerations across time and space | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 76 |
17 | Chinese emigration in global context, 1850–1940 | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 70 |
18 | Circulation: reflections on circularity, entity, and liquidity in the language of global history | Journal of Global History | 2017 | 68 |
19 | Literacy and the ‘great divide’ in the Islamic world, 1300–1800 | Journal of Global History | 2007 | 64 |
20 | The village as Cold War site: experts, development, and the history of rural reconstruction | Journal of Global History | 2011 | 60 |
21 | The Lumumba University in Moscow: higher education for a Soviet–Third World alliance, 1960–91 | Journal of Global History | 2019 | 60 |
22 | Africa and the globalization process: western Africa, 1450–1850 | Journal of Global History | 2007 | 58 |
23 | Reflections on the transnational turn in United States history: theory and practice | Journal of Global History | 2009 | 57 |
24 | The Eurasian silver century, 1276–1359: commensurability and multiplicity | Journal of Global History | 2009 | 56 |
25 | Warhorse and post-nomadic empire in Asia, c. 1000–1800 | Journal of Global History | 2007 | 52 |
26 | Was fashion a European invention? | Journal of Global History | 2008 | 52 |
27 | Resurrecting Che: radicalism, the transnational imagination, and the politics of heroes | Journal of Global History | 2012 | 52 |
28 | ‘Trust in God, but tie your camel first.’ The economic organization of the trans-Saharan slave trade between the fourteenth and nineteenth centuries | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 51 |
29 | Raising revenue in the British empire, 1870–1940: how ‘extractive’ were colonial taxes? | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 50 |
30 | Algeria, France, Mexico, UNESCO: a transnational history of anti-racism and decolonization, 1932–1962 | Journal of Global History | 2011 | 50 |
31 | The illusions of encounter: Muslim ‘minds’ and Hindu revolutionaries in First World War Germany and after | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 48 |
32 | The monetization of global poverty: the concept of poverty in World Bank history, 1944–90 | Journal of Global History | 2014 | 48 |
33 | A zone of refuge in Southeast Asia? Reconceptualizing interior spaces | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 45 |
34 | Borderlands and border narratives: a longitudinal study of challenges and opportunities for local traders shaped by the Sino-Vietnamese border | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 45 |
35 | Asian knowledge and the development of calico printing in Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 45 |
36 | Merchants, migrants, missionaries, and globalization in the early-modern Pacific | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 44 |
37 | The World Bank and the politics of productivity: the debate on economic growth, poverty, and living standards in the 1950s | Journal of Global History | 2011 | 44 |
38 | Energy crisis and growth 1650–1850: the European deviation in a comparative perspective | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 43 |
39 | Editorial – the roots of global civil society and the interwar moment | Journal of Global History | 2012 | 43 |
40 | Negotiating the meaning of global heritage: ‘cultural landscapes’ in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, 1972–92 | Journal of Global History | 2013 | 43 |
41 | ‘Even in the remotest corners of the world’: globalized piracy and international law, 1500–1900 | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 41 |
42 | The League of Nations: a retreat from international law? | Journal of Global History | 2012 | 41 |
43 | Globalizing the 1926 International Sanitary Convention | Journal of Global History | 2011 | 39 |
44 | Mobilizing labour in African agriculture: the role of the International Colonial Institute in the elaboration of a standard of colonial administration, 1895–1930 | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 38 |
45 | Social capital, ‘trust’ and the role of networks in Julfan trade: informal and semi-formal institutions at work | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 37 |
46 | Britain, industry and perceptions of China: Matthew Boulton, ‘useful knowledge’ and the Macartney Embassy to China 1792–94 | Journal of Global History | 2006 | 36 |
47 | Across Zomia with merchants, monks, and musk: process geographies, trade networks, and the Inner-East–Southeast Asian borderlands | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 36 |
48 | Mining, history, and the anti-state Wa: the politics of autonomy between Burma and China | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 36 |
49 | The global social insurance movement since the 1880s | Journal of Global History | 2010 | 36 |
50 | India in the early modern world economy: modes of production, reproduction and exchange | Journal of Global History | 2007 | 35 |