Lance E. Davis is Mary Stillman Harkness Professor of Social Science at the California Institute of Technology. He is author or editor of many books, including Institutional Change and American Economic Growth (1971, with Douglass North), Mammon and the Pursuit of Empire: The Political Economy of British Imperialism (1986, with Robert Huttenback, revised and abridged edition, 1988), International Capital Markets and American Economic Growth, 1820-1914 (1994, with Robert Cull), and Evolving Financial Markets and International Capital Flows: Britain, the Americas, and Australia, 1870-1914 (200, with Robert Gallman), all published by Cambridge University Press. Professor Davis has also contributed chapters to the Cambridge Economic History of the United States.
Stanley L. Engerman is Professor of Economics and of History at the University of Rochester. He is the co-editor of The Cambridge Economic History of the United States and of Finance, Intermediaries, and Economic Development (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
Preface
1. Introduction: 'Thou shalt not pass'
2. Britain, France and Napoleon's Continental Systems, 1793-1815
3. The United States versus Great Britain, 1776-1815
4. The North blockades the Confederacy, 1861-5
5. International law and naval blockades during World War I: Britain, Germany, and the United States: traditional strategies versus the submarine
6. Legal and economic aspects of naval blockades: the United States, Great Britain, and Germany in World War II
7. The American submarine and aerial mine blockade of the Japanese home islands, 1941-5
8. Blockades without war: from Pacific blockades to sanctions
9. Blockades, war and international law: what it all means
Conclusion.