All Stories

  1. Under Pressure: Anxiety, Depression, and Burnout Among Women Leaders and its Impact on Entrepreneurial Performance
  2. How did historical trends impact women’s involvement in financial markets? Evidence from women shareholders in Spain (1918-1948)
  3. Erratum to “The effect of socioeconomic factors, fear of crime and social mobilization on the evaluation of judiciary decisions” [Revista Galega de Economía, Vol. 32, n. 3 (2023). https://doi.org/10.15304/rge.32.3.9274]
  4. Gender and bankarization in Spain, 1949–1970
  5. The effect of socioeconomic factors, fear of crime and social mobilization on the evaluation of judiciary decisions
  6. Gender Differential and Financial Inclusion: Women Shareholders of Banco Hispano Americano in Spain (1922–35)
  7. Burnout, mood disorders and socioeconomic consequences among civil servants: a protocol for a systematic review
  8. DIANA (1969-1978): the first women’s finance magazine in Spain
  9. Gendered capitalism. Sewing machines and multinational business in Spain and Mexico (1850–1940)
  10. Mirror, Bridge or Stone? Female Owners of Firms in Spain During the Second Half of the Long Nineteenth Century
  11. Mistresses of company capital: Female partners in ­multi-owner firms, Spain (1886–1936)
  12. Instructions not included: Spain’sSociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada, 1919–1936
  13. Creating theSociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada: The Use of Legal Flexibility in Spanish Company Law, 1869–1953
  14. Granaries (pósitos): a source of finance for Spain's small farmers, 1900–1950
  15. Spain's development of rural credit cooperatives from 1900 to 1936: the role of financial resources and formal education
  16. Cooperatives before cooperative law: business law and cooperatives in Spain, 1869-1931