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About
Bob Bennett is Emeritus Professor Cambridge University and a Visiting Professor in the LSE Department where he is developing research using historical digital census records, and seeking to enhance cooperation with the Cambridge Group for History of Population and Social Structure (Campop). After being Professor of Geography at LSE 1985-96, then at Cambridge, with a career in research on spatial statistics and regional economies, he has since about 2008 developed research projects using historical data spanning the 18th to the 21st centuries. The LSE Department provides an ideal environment to take this forwards over three broad themes: history of entrepreneurship, small business policy, and business associations:
History of Entrepreneurship
I have attempted to fill the gaps that have prevented previous large-scale research on the history of British entrepreneurship over the 19th and early 20th centuries to improve the interpretation of how modern entrepreneurship differs or is part of a continuing patterns of behaviour. The historical work mainly uses the digital records of the population census. Apart from publications, a major output has been the data deposit of the British Business Census of Entrepreneurs (BBCE) at the UK Data Archive Service [SN: 8600].
http://beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk/datacatalogue/studies/study?id=8600 An entry website gives a User Guide, online Atlas and tutorial materials https://www.bbce.uk/ BBCE links with the historic census records for the whole population in I-CeM, the Integrated Census Microdata prepared by Schürer and Higgsat the UK Data Archive Service [SN: 7481] http://dx.doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-7481-1
BBCE is now the primary micro-data source on individual entrepreneurs in Victorian and Edwardian Britain identifying the 1.5 to 2 million self-employed people listed in each census for England and Wales 1851-1911, and Scotland 1851-1901, and their ‘employment status’ as employer, proprietor with no employees, or company director, with workforce size of their businesses. An overview of what this shows is given in The Age of Entrepreneurship https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315160375
Small Business Support Policy
I have had a long-term research agenda to examine the way in which small businesses access and use external advice, their locational needs, and the differences between different types of suppliers: such as commercial advisors (consultants, accountants, lawyers), business associations (chambers of commerce, sector trade associations), and public agents (e.g. British Business Link, LEPs). This research has tracked British policy on SMEs since the 1980s. Entrepreneurship and small business policy https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315160375
expands on examples of the interface between the history of entrepreneurship, institutional developments of the 'business enabling environment', and small business policies using case studies from nations around the world.
History of Chambers of Commerce
The history and current development of local Chambers of Commerce has been a research interest since I was commissioned to prepare the National development Strategy for British Chambers of Commerce in 1990. I subsequently developed historical analysis of chambers and other local business associations in Britain. My main outputs cover the history of the British system of private law chambers that began in cities across the Atlantic economy from the 1760s and 1770s. The earliest were in New York, Jersey, Guernsey, Liverpool, Manchester, Charleston, Boston, Jamaica, Quebec, Dublin, Belfast, Glasgow and other port cities in the UK and Ireland. Their origin related to anger with business taxes, inadequate trade treaties, unsatisfactory government officials, and other government 'bads' - especially the 1775-83 war with America.
Business Voice: The History of Chambers of Commerce in Britain, Ireland and Revolutionary America, 1760-2011 is a definitive study of the long-term history
The Voice of Liverpool Business: The first Chamber of Commerce and the Atlantic economy, 1774-c.1796 gives the first study of the previously unknown early history of this important chamber
The Documents of the first Chambers of Commerce in Britain and Ireland, 1767-1839 provides transcribed copies and commentary on all the major documents of the earliest chambers in the British Isles
Expertise
Analytical economic geography, business management and public policy: focusing on small businesses, agents of local economic development, and business associations.