{"id":"W2118687986","doi":"10.1093/ereh/het004","title":"Picking winners? The effect of birth order and migration on parental human capital investments in pre-modern England","year":2013,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Review of Economic History","topic":"Historical Economic and Social Studies","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":19,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Queen's University","keywords":"Human capital; Economics; Investment (military); Industrialisation; Labour economics; Order (exchange); Demographic economics; Economic growth; Market economy; Political science; Finance; Law","routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false,"invisible_to_affiliation_only":true},"retraction":null,"screen":{"n_in":0,"stratum":"fund_new","weight":1678.9,"opus":{"tier":"OUT","genre":"empirical","about_ca":false,"confidence":"high","reason":"Economic history of birth order, migration, and parental human capital investment in pre-modern England; the object is historical household behavior."},"gpt":{"tier":"OUT","genre":"empirical","about_ca":false,"confidence":"high","reason":"The study examines parental human-capital investments in pre-modern England, not the research system."},"grok":{"tier":"OUT","genre":"empirical","about_ca":false,"confidence":"high","reason":"Economic history of parental human-capital investment in pre-modern England; not about scientific research."}}}