Citation Impact
Citing Papers
Introduction to the Economics of Religion
1998 Standout
Are We Living in the Middle of an Industrial Revolution
1997 StandoutNobel
Burnout and Medical Errors Among American Surgeons
2010 Standout
Understanding associations among race, socioeconomic status, and health: Patterns and prospects.
2016 Standout
Reporting Medical Errors to Improve Patient Safety<subtitle>A Survey of Physicians in Teaching Hospitals</subtitle>
2008
Transforming Localities: Reflections on Time, Causality, and Narrative in Contemporary Historical Sociology
1997
Does it Pay to Be Good...And Does it Matter? A Meta-Analysis of the Relationship between Corporate Social and Financial Performance
2009 Standout
History of Information Science
1995
The industrial revolution and the Netherlands: Why did it not happen?
2000 StandoutNobel
“Opening Up” and “Closing Down”
2007 Standout
Coming Clean and Cleaning Up: Is Voluntary Disclosure a Signal of Effective Self-Policing?
2008
“A Constitutional Conveyance of Intelligence, Public and Private”: The Post Office, the Business of Printing, and the American Revolution
2010
Racism and Health II
2013
Analyzing Historical Contingency with Formal Methods
1994
Design-Based Research: Putting a Stake in the Ground
2004 Standout
Designing the nation. Banknotes, banal nationalism and alternative conceptions of the state
2011 Standout
The Literature of Bibliometrics, Scientometrics, and Informetrics
2001 Standout
Cardwell's Law and the political economy of technological progress
1994 StandoutNobel
Path dependence in historical sociology
2000 Standout
Mobilizing Local Religious Markets: Religious Pluralism in the Empire State, 1855 to 1865
1996
Works of Randolph Roth being referenced
American Homicide
2010
The Rude Hand of Innovation: Religion and Social Order in Albany, New York, 1652-1836.
1992
Is History a Process? Nonlinearity, Revitalization Theory, and the Central Metaphor of Social Science History
1992
Knowledge Is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early America, 1700-1865
1990
“To Err is Human”: Uniformly Reporting Medical Errors and Near Misses, a Naïve, Costly, and Misdirected Goal
2003