| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1996 | 無し | Why Did You Change Your Name? Name Changing Patterns and the Life Course in Early Modern Japan. | Social Science History Association (SSHA) Conference , October 1996 | New Orleans, | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1997 | 無し | Women in the Business House: Women and Employment in the Stem Family Businesses of Early Modern Japan. | Congress Internationale Demographique Historie (CIDH) Conference, March 1997. | New Delhi, | |||
| 永田メアリー | 学会報告論文・学会展望・書評 | NAGATA Mary, YONEMURA Chiyo | 1998 | 有り | Continuity, Solidarity, Family and Enterprise: What is an Ie? | Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux and Emiko Ochiai ed. | House and the stem family in EurAsian perspective, Proceedings of the C18 Session, | International Economic History Congress | ||
| 永田メアリー | 学会報告論文・学会展望・書評 | NAGATA Mary | 1998 | 無し | Name Changing Patterns and the Stem Family in Early Modern Japan: Shimomoriya. | Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux and Emiko Ochiai ed. | House and the stem family in EurAsian perspective, Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux and Emiko Ochiai ed. Proceedings of the C18 Session | International Economic History Congress | ||
| 永田メアリー | 論文 | NAGATA Mary | 1998 | 無し | Who Are You? Servant Origins and Social Mobility in Early Modern Japan. | EurAsian Project on Population and Family History Conference Paper Series No. 18. | ||||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1997 | 無し | Who Are You? Servant Origins and Social Mobility in Early Modern Japan | Social Science History Association meeting | Washington D.C., | |||
| 永田メアリー | 雑誌掲載の学術論文 | NAGATA Mary | 1999 | 無し | Balancing Family Strategies and Individual Choice: Name Changing in Early Modern Japan. | Japan Review 1999 | 11 | 国際日本文化研究センター | ||
| 永田メアリー | 学会報告論文・学会展望・書評 | NAGATA Mary | 1998 | 無し | Balancing Family Strategies and Individual Choice: Name Changing in Early Modern Japan. | European Social Science History Congress meeting, Amsterdam | European Social Science | |||
| 永田メアリー | 論文 | KUROSU Satomi.HAYAMI Akira | 1998 | 有り | Niita and Shimomoriya of the Nihonmatsu Domain in the Northeastern Region of Tokugawa Japan. | EurAsian Project on Population and Family History Working Paper Serie | 20 | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1998 | 無し | Labor Migration, Servant Origins and Social Mobility: a comparison of three villages in early modern Japan | International Economic History Congress, August 1998 | Seville | |||
| 永田メアリー | 学会報告論文・学会展望・書評 | NAGATA Mary | 1998 | 無し | Labor Migration, Servant Origins and Social Mobility: a comparison of three villages in early modern Japan | Social Science History Association meeting, Chicago, November 1998 | Chicago | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1998 | 無し | Images of the Family on Stage in Early Modern Japan. | Social Science History Association meeting, November 1998 | Chicago | |||
| 永田メアリー | 著書の一部 | NAGATA Mary | 近刊 | 無し | Labor Migration, Family and Community in Early Modern Japan. | Women, Gender and Labor Migration | Routledge Press. | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1999 | 無し | Disappearing Population: analysis of the lists of disappearances from the early modern population registers of two northeastern Japanese villages. | “Leaving Home in EurAsian Perspective” conference ESF, 19-20 June 1999 | Den Hague, Amsterdam | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1999 | 無し | Family Strategies in Stem Family Businesses in Early Modern Kyoto. | “Living in the City” conference CIDH, 27-29 September 1999 Rome, Italy | Rome, Italy | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 1999 | 無し | Labor Migration as a Family Strategy in Early Modern Japan. | Social Science History Association meeting, November 1999 | Fort Worth | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 2000 | 無し | The Organization of Labor and Labor Markets in Early Modern Japan | Association of Asian Studies meeting , March 2000 | San Diego | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 2000 | 無し | Migration and Networks in Early Modern Japan. | European Social Science History Congress meeting, April 2000 | Amsterdam | |||
| 永田メアリー | 口頭発表 | NAGATA Mary | 2000 | 無し | Female Labor Migration in Early Modern Japan, 1672-1870. | International Congress of Historical Sciences, August 2000. | Oslo, Norway |