Ronald Max Hartwell (1921–2009) was an Australian-born liberal economic historian of the British Industrial Revolution.
Hartwell's first academic appointment was at University of New South Wales (1950–56), where he held the chair of economic history.
From his retirement in 1977, Hartwell served as visiting professor of economics at the University of Virginia every fall semester into the early 1990s, and often spent the spring semester at the University of Chicago in a similar capacity.
[1] His article "The Rising Standard of Living in England, 1800–1850" in the Economic History Review generated a great deal of controversy.
[1] Hartwell's view that industrialisation had immeasurably improved the lot of the poor was in contrast to the prevailing opinion, notably that of Eric Hobsbawm, which stressed the damaging economic effects industrialization on the poor.