Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T22:27:27.091Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Publications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2009

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Mughal Administration in Golconda, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1975.Google Scholar
(Ed.), Kingship and Authority in South Asia, Center for South Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1978. Reprinted, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
(Ed.), Precious Metals in the Later Medieval and Early Modern World, Carolina Academic Press, Durham, 1983.Google Scholar
(Ed.), with Tucker, Richard, Global Deforestation and the Nineteenth Century World Economy, Duke Press Policy Studies, Durham, 1983.Google Scholar
Document Forms for Official Orders of Appointment in the Mughal Empire: Translation, Notes, and Text. E.J.W. Gibb Memorial Series, Gibb Memorial Trust, London, 1986.Google Scholar
(Ed.), The Imperial Monetary System of Mughal India, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1987. Reprinted in paperback, 1999.Google Scholar
(Ed.), with Tucker, Richard, World Deforestation in the Twentieth Century, Duke University Press, Durham, NC, 1988.Google Scholar
(Ed.), with Turner, B. L. et al. , The Earth As Transformed by Human Action, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, Eng. 1991.Google Scholar
The Mughal Empire, Cambridge University Press, The New Cambridge History of India, I: 5, Cambridge, England, 1993.Google Scholar
Power, Administration and Finance in Mughal India, Variorum Collected Studies Series CS419, London, 1993. (Collected articles).Google Scholar
(Ed.), Land Property and the Environment, Institute of Contemporary Studies Press, Oakland CA, 2002.Google Scholar
The Unending Frontier: Environmental History of the Early Modern World, University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 2003.Google Scholar
“The Economic History of the Lodi Period: 1451–1526,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 8 (1965) 48–67.Google Scholar
“The Islamic Frontier in the East: Expansion into South Asia,” South Asia, 4 (1974) 91–109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
“European City-States on the Coromandel Coast,” in Studies in the Foreign Relations of India, Professor H.K. Sherwani Felicitation Volume, edited by Joshi, P.M. (Hyderabad, 1975).Google Scholar
“The Hyderabad Karnatik, 1687–1724,” Modem Asian Studies, 9 (1975) 241–260.Google Scholar
“The Seventeenth Century Concentration of State Power at Hyderabad,” Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society, 23 (1975) 1–35.Google Scholar
“The Imperial Crisis in the Deccan,” The Journal of Asian Studies, 35 (1976) 236–256.Google Scholar
With Nicholas, Ralph W., “Symposium: The Contributions of Louis Dumont,” The Journal of Asian Studies, 35 (1976) 579–650. Published as a separate reprint by the Association for Asian Studies.Google Scholar
“Mughal Retreat From Coastal Andhra,” Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, (1978) 39–50.Google Scholar
“The Formulation of Imperial Authority Under Akbar and Jahangir,” in Richards, J.F. (Ed.), Kingship and Authority in South Asia, Madison: Center for South Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin (1978) 252–285. Reprinted in Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam, The Mughal State 1526–1750, Delhi: Oxford University Press (1998).Google Scholar
With Rao, Velchuru Narayana, “Banditry in Mughal India: Historical and Folk Perceptions,” Indian Economic and Social History Review, 17 (1980) 95–120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
“The Indian Empire and Peasant Production of Opium,” Modern Asian Studies, 15 (1981) 59–82.Google Scholar
“Mughal State Finance and the Pre-Modem World Economy,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 23 (1981) 285–308.Google Scholar
“Outflows of Precious Metals From Early Islamic India,” in Richards, J.F. (Ed.), Precious Metals in the Later Medieval and Early Modern World, Durham: Carolina Press (1983) 183–205.Google Scholar
With McAlpin, Michelle, “Cotton Cultivating and Land Clearing in the Bombay Deccan and Karnatak, 1818–1920,” in Tucker, and Richards, (Eds.), Global Deforestation and the Nineteenth Century World Economy, Durham: Duke University Press Policy Studies (1983) 68–94.Google Scholar
“Norms of Comportment Among Imperial Mughal Officers,” in Metcalf, Barbara (Ed.), Moral Conduct and Authority, Berkeley: University of California Press (1984).Google Scholar
“Documenting Environmental History and Global Patterns of Land Conversions,” Environment 26, 9 (Nov. 1984) 7–13, 34–38.Google Scholar
With Tucker, Richard, “The Global Economy and Forest Clearance in the Nineteenth Century,” in Bailes, Kendall E. (Ed.), Environmental History: Critical Issues in Comparative Perspective, University Press of America and American Society for Environmental History (1984) 577–585.Google Scholar
With Hagen, James R. and Haynes, Edward S., “Changing Land Use in Bihar, Punjab and Haryana, 1850–1970,” in Modern Asian Studies 19, Cambridge University Press (1985) 699–732.Google Scholar
With Hagen, James R. and Haynes, Edward S., “Changes in the Land and Human Productivity in Northern India, 1870–1970,” Agricultural History, 59, 4 (October 1985) 523–548.Google Scholar
With Gordon, Stewart “Kinship and Pargana in Eighteenth Century Khandesh,” The Indian Economic and Social History Review, 22, 4 (1985).Google Scholar
“World Environmental History and Economic Development,” in Clark, W.C. and Munn, R.E. (Eds.), Sustainable Development of the Biosphere, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1986).Google Scholar
“Official Revenues and Money Flows in a Mughal Province,” in Richards, J. F. (Ed.), The Imperial Monetary System of Mughal India, New Delhi: Oxford University press (1987) 193–231.Google Scholar
“The Imperial Capital,” in Brand, M. and Lowry, G. D. (Eds.) Fatehpur Sikri, Bombay: Marg Publications (1987) 65–82.Google Scholar
With Hagen, J., “A Century of Rural Expansion in Assam, 1870–1970” Itinerario, II (1987) 193–208.Google Scholar
“Environmental Changes in Dehra Dun Valley, India: 1880–1980,” Mountain Research and Development, 7 (1987) 299–304.Google Scholar
“Rice Paddies for Mangroves: Domesticated Wetlands in South and Southeast Asia” in Williams, Michael (Ed.) Tropical Wetlands: A Threatened Landscape, London: Basil Blackwell (1990) 217–233.Google Scholar
“The Seventeenth Century Crisis in South Asia” Modern Asian Studies, 24 (1990) 625–638.Google Scholar
With Flint, Elizabeth, “Long-Term Transformations in the Sundarbans Wetlands Forests of Bengal”, Agriculture and Human Values (1990) 17–33.Google Scholar
With Flint, Elizabeth P., “Historical Analysis of Changes in Land Use and Carbon Stock of Vegetation in South and Southeast Asia”. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, (1991) 91–110.Google Scholar
“Land Transformation” in Turner, B. L., et al. in The Earth as Transformed by Human Action, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press (1991) 163–178.Google Scholar
With Flint, Elizabeth P., “Contrasting Patterns of Shorea exploitation in India and Malaysia in the 19th and 20th Centuries”, in Dargavel, John and Tucker, Richard (Eds.), Changing Pacific Forests: Historical Perspectives on the Forest Economy of the Pacific Basin, Durham, NC: Forest History Society (1992) pp. 89104.Google Scholar
With Flint, Elizabeth P., “A Century of Land Use Change in South and Southeast Asia”. Chapter 2 in Date, V.H. (Ed.), Effects of Land Use Change on Atmospheric Concentrations: Southeast Asia as a Case Study, New York: Springer-Verlag (1994) 15–66.Google Scholar
With Flint, Elizabeth P., “Trends in Carbon Content of Vegetation in South and Southeast Asia Associated with Changes in Land Use”, Chapter 3 in Dale, V.H. (Ed.), Effects of Land Use Change on Atmospheric Concentrations: Southeast Asia as a Case Study, New York: Springer-Verlag (1994) 201–299.Google Scholar
“Historiography of Mughal Gardens”, in Wescoat, James L. Jr. and Wolshke-Bulmahn, Joachim (Eds.), Mughal Gardens: Source, Places, Representations, and Prospects, Washington, D.C: Dumbarton Oaks (1996).Google Scholar
“Early Modern India and World History” Journal of World History, 8 (1997) 197–209.Google Scholar
“Only a World Perspective is Significant: Settlement Frontiers and Property Rights in Early Modem World History”, in Conway, Jill Ker, Keniston, Kenneth and Marx, Leo (Eds.) Earth, Air, Fire, Water, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press (1999) 102–118.Google Scholar
“The Mughal Empire,” in Ziad, Zeenut (Ed.), The Magnificent Mughals, Karachi: Oxford University Press (2001) 3–23.Google Scholar
“Toward a Global System of Property Rights in Land,” in Richards, John F. (Ed.), Land, Property and the Environment, Oakland, CA: Institute for Contemporary Studies Press (2002) 13–37.Google Scholar
With Bhargava, Meena, “Defining Property Rights in Land in Colonial India: Gorakhpur Region in the Indo-Gangetic Plain,” in Richards, John F. (Ed.), Land, Property and the Environment, Oakland: Institute for Contemporary Studies Press (2002) 235–262.Google Scholar
“The Royal Commission on Opium of 1895”, Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 36 (2002) 375–420.Google Scholar
“The Opium Industry in British India”, Indian Economic and Social History Review, Dharma Kumar Special Issue, Sanjay Subrahmanyam (Ed.), (2002) 149–180.Google Scholar
“Opium's Moral Economy in Colonial India” in Mills, James and Barton, Patricia (Eds.), Drugs and Empires: Essays in Modern Imperialism and Intoxication 1500–1930, London: Palgrave (forthcoming, 2007).Google Scholar