1R. Gilpin, The Political Economy of International Relations, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987.
2Report on the Commercial Relations of the United States with All Foreign Nations, Senate, 34th Congress, First Session, Vol.I, Washington: A.O.P. Nicholson Printer, 1856.
3Gaillard Hunt ed., Journals of the Continental Congress,1774-1789 , Vol. XVII, Washington: Government Printing Offlce, 1910.
4Edmund S. Morgan, "The Puritan Ethic and the American Revolution," in William and Mary Quarterly, 3d Series, Vol.XXIV, No.l, January 1967.
5William Appleman Williams, "The Age of Mercantilism: An Interpretation of the American Political Economy, 1763 -1828," in The William andMary Quarterly, 3d Series, Vol. NV, No.4. October 1958.
6Larry Sawers, "The Navigation Acts Revisited," in Economic History Review, Vol. XLV, No.2, May 1992.
7Thomas Jefferson, "On the Present Need to Promote Manufacturing," in The Annals of America, 1797-1820 , Domestic Expansion and Foreign Entanglements, Vol.4, Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc, 1976.
8John E. Crowley, The Privileges of Independence : Neomercantilism and the American Revolution, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993.
9Curtis P. Nettels, "British Mercantilism and the Thirteen Colonies," in Stanley Cohen and Forest G. Hill, eds., American Econora& History: Essays in Interpretation, Philadephia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1966.
10Christine Margerum Harlen, "A Reappraisal of Classical Economic Nationalism and Economic Liberalism," in lnternational Studies Quarterly, Vol. 43, Issue 4, December 1999.