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With an astonishing unity of inspiration that serves as a
counterbalance to the richness and variety of his themes and
positions, Albert O. Hirschman, great political economist of our
time, introduces us to the study of Western Europe, the United
States and Latin America. From his own memories of the fascist
period retold on the occasion of his honorary degree to two
previously unpublished writings on the origins of European
integration, from a group of illuminating essays on the
contemporary economic and political realities of developed Western
countries to a selection of texts on South America containing the
provisional balance sheet of long experience, this is an
intellectual lesson in the truest sense. Through his original way
of penetrating the realities of our time, the author unveils a
series of concrete issues and new and unlikely ways forward,
constructing a tenacious and possibilist scientific pathway aimed
at the unstinting encouragement of mutual understanding, economic
and civic growth, and the democratic development of three
continents.
Well-known as a pioneer of economic development, Albert O.
Hirschman has been the flag-bearer of possibilism and
reform-mongering in political science. How Reforms Should Be Passed
is an anthology of texts chosen personally by Hirschman on the
latter production line-as he was to call it informally-that is
rooted in his long and quasi-exclusive concern for development and
Latin America. Key essays on the formation and the evolution of
Hirschman's point of view on the subject are collected: from
"Ideologies of Economic Development in Latin America" to Journeys
(and later "A Return Journey") on policy-making; from "Obstacles to
the Perception of Change" to "The Search for Paradigms as a
Hindrance to Understanding." They show an extraordinary turn of the
mind in the making that will be very useful for the United States
and the developed world as well-as the final texts of the book on
democracy and Europe (Italy, Germany and France) bear out. This
book represents a unique opportunity for becoming familiar with
many original and perceptive lenses provided by Hirschman to look
at the world we live in, and especially to favor social
change-focusing (first of all) on the cultural and political side
of the matter.
This volume brings together select texts representative of the full
range of intellectual output of one of the greatest and most
eclectic economists of our time, Albert O. Hirschman. Covering a
time span of over forty years, they recall his most prominent books
and include many additional themes taken from essays of
wide-ranging origin and content. The title How Economics Should Be
Complicated has the dual sense of an endpoint and a central and
recurrent theme in the author's experience, which unfolds in his
critical-but constructive-relationship with economic theory, his
openness to other social sciences and his democratic and
"possibilist" political inspiration. This stands as the basis of an
important lesson in intellectual rebirth.
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Dialogues (Paperback)
Luca Meldolesi; Translated by Michael Gilmartin; Eugenio Colorni
bundle available
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R446
R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
Save R72 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In Discovering the Possible Luca Meldolesi recounts over half a
century of Hirschman's work, exploring the motivations,
methodology, and unexpected developments of his research. Published
simultaneously in Italian, Spanish, and English, Discovering the
Possible is the first book to probe the whole corpus of Hirschman's
work and to highlight the wealth of his ideas and the sharp
self-irony with which his intuitions are forged into thoughts. The
book will interest students and professionals in economics,
sociology, political science, and moral philosophy, as well as
those who focus on the development sector of these disciplines.
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