|
Showing 1 - 25 of
25 matches in All Departments
This collection includes both refereed articles and review essays.
The articles highlight research on the role of western economic
advisors in China before the Communist Revolution (Paul Trescott),
John Ryan on minimum wage legislation, a symposium on Clement
Juglar, and a comparison of recent work in the history of economics
and the history of science. Review essays on new publications
examine a range of subjects, including: David Hume's political
economy; conceptions of economic morality in American thought;
Frank Knight and the Austrians on institutions; Friedrich Engels;
Austrian views on entrepreneurship; Coase and Pigou on government
intervention; Hayek and conservatism; the history of the 'living
wage' notion; methodological consideration of economics and
econometrics; and, Paul Heyne's essays on economic and ethics.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the 17th century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the 17th century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the 17th century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the 17th century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the 17th century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the 17th century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the seventeenth century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the seventeenth century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the seventeenth century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the seventeenth century through to 1900.
This collection brings together a comprehensive selection of
documents from the history of US and Canadian economic thought from
the seventeenth century through to 1900.
Volume 27C of "Research in the History of Economic Thought and
Methodology" consists of documents from Glenn Johnson and F. Taylor
Ostrander. Part I includes: notes from lectures by James E. Meade
on the linking of monetary theory with the pure theory of value
(Oxford University, 1932-1933); notes from the Socialist Club at
the Cafe Verique in Geneva (Summer 1931); correspondence between
Frank H. Knight and F. Taylor Ostrander; index to the Treasury
Department papers of F. Taylor Ostrander; and notes on the long and
wide-ranging career of F. Taylor Ostrander. Part II presents Glenn
Johnson's notes from courses at the University of Chicago (1946);
notes from Lloyd Mints' course on money and banking, economics 330
(Fall 1946); incomplete course notes from Milton Friedman's price
theory, economics 300B, University of Chicago (Spring 1947); and
notes from seminars by John R. Hicks and Tjalling Koopmans,
University of Chicago (October 1946).
Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology is an
annual research series which presents materials in two fields, both
broadly considered: the history of economic thought and the
methodology of economics. The annual A-volume contains
peer-reviewed articles comparable to other academic journals in the
history of economics, except that long pieces are welcome. The
A-volume also publishes symposia, and review essays on new works in
the history of economic thought, methodology and related fields
(philosophy of science, sociology of science, rhetoric of science,
and intellectual history), including multiple reviews of the same
work. The annual B- volume are archival supplements that present
previously unpublished materials -- lecture notes, papers, longer
manuscripts, correspondence, etc.- of interest in both fields
addressed in the A-vol.
Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology is an
annual research series which presents materials in two fields, both
broadly considered: the history of economic thought and the
methodology of economics. The annual A-volume contains
peer-reviewed articles comparable to other academic journals in the
history of economics, except that long pieces are welcome. The
A-volume also publishes symposia, and review essays on new works in
the history of economic thought, methodology and related fields
(philosophy of science, sociology of science, rhetoric of science,
and intellectual history), including multiple reviews of the same
work. The annual B- volumes are archival supplements that present
previously unpublished materials -- lecture notes, papers, longer
manuscripts, correspondence, etc.- of interest in both fields
addressed in the A-vol.
This volume includes archival documents and essays exploring the
inter-relationship between the government and the economy. In the
first piece, Levy, Peart, and Albert examine the one-sided
controversy generated by Rose Wilder Lane and V. Orval Watts
against a new generation of Keynes-influenced textbooks which
focused on governmental policy and the scope of government
activity. In addition to their essay, Levy et al. include
significant and interesting historical documents as part of the
story. The second piece, by Warren J. Samuels, examines Heinrich
von Treitschke's view on property as a function of politics using
archival documents. The last three pieces include a detailed
examination of Warren J. Samuels' views on the economic role of
government, based on his course notes in the area. Two sets of
notes are published in addition to the introductory essay.
The collection includes both refereed articles and review essays of
recently published books in the history of economic thought and
methodology. The articles highlight the work of Warren J. Samuels
(founding editor of the research annual), American economists' role
in the creation of federal trade acts, and Islamic economic
methodology. A review symposium on Malcolm Rutherford's The
Institutionalist Movement in America is followed by reviews of
books on Adam Smith, George Warde Norman, William Whewell and
Richard Jones, J. S. Mill and F. A. Hayek, Catholic economic
thought, and morality and economics.
This collection includes both refereed articles and review essays
of recent books in the history of economic thought and methodology.
The articles highlight research the historiography and methodology
of the English Poor Laws, behavioural economics, and the socialist
calculation debate; as well as A.D. Roy and portfolio theory and
correspondence regarding John Maurice Clark's "Economics of
Planning".
This volume publishes notes from Martin Bronfenbrenner's course in
the Distribution of Income as taken by Warren J. Samuels at the
University of Wisconsin in 1954. Bronfenbrenner, who received his
PhD from the University of Chicago in 1939, was an unusually
prolific author with wide ranging interests. 'The New Palgrave'
entry on Bronfenbrenner notes that he was probably unique in
holding simultaneous membership in both the Mt Pelerin Society and
the Union of Radical Political Economists. Bronfenbrenner's work on
income distribution is particularly important as it modified
neoclassical theory to be able to address questions raised by both
classical and neo-Marxian analysis. He described his own work as
being 'summed up in the proposition that the distribution of income
and wealth is an important factor in judging an economic system on
welfare grounds, but that such emotive terms as 'maldistribution',
'exploitation', and 'poverty' are all subjective.' This volume thus
provides an important archival source for economists working in
mid-20th century history of economic thought as well as those
interested in the evolution of neoclassical theory and the nexus
between economics and Cold War politics.
This collection includes both refereed articles and review essays
of recent books in the history of economic thought and methodology.
The articles highlight research the historiography and methodology
of the English Poor Laws, behavioural economics, and the socialist
calculation debate; as well as A.D. Roy and portfolio theory and
correspondence regarding John Maurice Clark's "Economics of
Planning".
This volume presents commissioned essays on important, but often
neglected, Irish and English economists of the 18th and 19th
centuries. Noticeable papers include Tom Sowell on 'Observations on
Certain Verbal Disputes' and Sam Hollander's extended essay on
Samuel Bailey, which adds to his voluminous treatment of the great
classical economists. This volume intends to bring much needed
attention back onto forgotten economists that shaped economic
history.
This volume explores ways in which an organization's existing
competences can be enhanced as sources of competitive advantage -
either enduring or intendedly transitional. Competence enhancing
activities considered include political lobbying to extend the
lifetime and value of a firm's competences, expanding services to
enhance the value of manufacturing capabilities, initiating
knowledge management projects, strategically adapting a firm's
governance structures to take advantage of government policy
initiatives, staging development of competences in
internationalization processes, improving capabilities in managing
alliances, understanding the factors conducive to entrepreneurial
action-taking, and using individual competency development in
self-managing processes for organizational competence building.
This Book Set consists of: *9781780520063 - Research in the History
of Economic Thought and Methodology: A Research Annual Volume (Part
A) *9781780520087 - Frank H. Knight in Iowa City, 1919-1928 (Part
B) *9781780520100 - Wisconsin, Labor, Income, and Institutions:
Contributions from Commons and Bronfenbrenner (Part C) This
collection includes both refereed articles and review essays of
recent books in the history of economic thought and methodology.
The articles highlight research - the historiography and
methodology of the English Poor Laws, behavioural economics, and
the socialist calculation debate; as well as A.D. Roy and portfolio
theory and correspondence regarding John Maurice Clark's "Economics
of Planning".
This Book Set consists of: *9781848556560 - A Research Annual (Part
A) *9781848556584 - Henry George, The Transatlantic Irish, and
their Times (Part B) *9781848556607 - Documents from Glenn Johnson
and F. Taylor Ostrander (Part C) "Research in the History of
Economic Thought and Methodology" is an annual research series
which presents in three volumes materials in two fields, both
broadly considered: the history of economic thought; and the
methodology of economics. Volume 27 A features articles on
classical and modern economic thought (Smith's lecturing, editing
the Harrod papers, Viner's reminiscences of the New Deal, Lavoie's
lectures, and recent relational conceptions of the individual), and
includes review essays on books about historical figures in
economics (Schumpeter, Keynes, Mincer) and the historical treatment
of particular movements or issues in the discipline (Chicago
School, comparative economic history, economic growth,
postmodernism, and ethics). Volume 27 B is devoted to a collection
of primary materials about Henry George's relation to the Irish
land question. Volume 27 C contains course notes from Oxford and
the University of Chicago taken by F. Taylor Ostrander and Glenn
Johnson, an autobiographical account of Ostrander's career, and
some other notes and correspondence related to his work and
studies.
|
|