Content
November 2021, Volume 14, Issue 1-2
- 1-32 Justice and just price in Francisco de Vitoria's Commentary on Summa Theologica II-II q77
by José Luis Cendejas Bueno - 33-62 Neoliberal governmentality, knowledge work, and thumos
by Benda Hofmeyr - 63-107 Method and scope in Joseph A. Schumpeter's economics: a pluralist perspective
by Turan Yay - 108-135 A critical note on the scientific conception of economics: claiming for a methodological pluralism
by Rouven Reinke - 136-176 The apodictic method and the dialogue between theology and science (I)
by Fr Petre Comşa & Costea Munteanu - 177-185 How the attitude of Chicago economics towards philosophy changed over time: an essay on what role some historical methods should play in practicing the philosophy of economics
by Peter Galbács - 186-198 What can economists learn from Foucault?
by Ceyhun Gürkan - 199-207 Academic discipline of economics as hedonist philosophy
by Tiago Cardão-Pito - 208-217 'Everything You Know is Wrong'. A series of challenges and responses
by Frederic Jennings Jr. - 218-226 Teaching the philosophical grounding of economics to economists: a 10 years' experience
by Ricardo Crespo - 227-238 Economics as the scientization of politics
by Jon Mulberg - 239-246 Review of François Levrau, Noel Clycq (eds.), Equality. Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Cham, Palgrave Macmillan/ Springer Nature, 1 st Edition, 2021, 356 pp
by Henrieta Şerban - 247-255 Review of Edward Nelson, Milton Friedman and Economic Debate in the United States, 1932-1972 (volumes 1 and 2), Chicago and London, The University of Chicago Press
by Peter Galbács - 256-259 Review of Stephen J. Macekura, The Mismeasure of Progress: Economic Growth and Its Critics, Chicago and London, The University of Chicago Press, 2020
by Dragoș Bîgu - 260-264 Review of Margaret Schabas and Carl Wennerlind, A Philosopher's Economist: Hume and the Rise of Capitalism, Chicago IL, University of Chicago Press, 316 p., e-book
by Mihail-Valentin Cernea
November 2020, Volume 13, Issue 2
- 1-57 Economic essays (part two): toward a realistic concept of choice
by Frederic B. JENNINGS JR. - 58-80 The rationality principle as a universal grammar of economic explanations
by Cheng LI - 81-90 Nordhaus on philosophy in climate change economics
by Laurent JODOIN - 91-115 Nietzsche, Deleuze and Guattari: performative constitution of unpayable debt in finance capitalism
by Christina BANALOPOULOU - 116-136 Marx’s Law of value and the ontology of labour: a Castoriadian critical point of view
by Richard SOBEL - 137-161 Towards a theory of ignorance
by Adam FFORDE - 162-184 Comparing economic theories or: pluralism in economics and the need for a comparative approach to scientific research programmes
by Arne HEISE - 185-201 Rejoinder on animal spirits in Descartes and Keynes: a response to Kurt Smith
by Sonya Marie SCOTT - 202-214 Why is economics not part of a system of scientific ethics? A review essay on Wilfred Dolfsma and Ioana Negru’s The Ethical Formation of Economists
by Altug YALCINTAS - 215-219 Review of Craig Smith, Adam Smith, Cambridge / Medford MA, Polity Press, 1st Edition, 2020, 210 pp., pb, ISBN-13: 978-1-5095-1823-4
by Sergiu BĂLAN - 220-225 Review of Dumas, Lloyd J., Building the Good Society. The Power and Limits of Markets, Democracy and Freedom in an Increasingly Polarized World, Emerald Publishing, 2020, xiv+228 pp., hb, ISBN 978-1-83867-632-2
by George ŞERBAN-OPRESCU - 226-230 Review of Mark Thornton, The Skyscraper Curse: And How Austrian Economists Predicted Every Major Economic Crisis of the Last Century, Auburn, Alabama, Mises Institute, 2018, 275 pp., pb, ISBN 978-1-61016-684-3
by Alexandru PĂTRUŢI - 231-235 Review of Andrea Komlosy, Work. The Last 1000 Years, translated by Jakob K. Watson with Loren Balhorn, London, Verso, 2018, 265 pp., hb, ISBN 978-1-78663-410-8
by Valentin COJANU
November 2019, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 1-18 The resilience of modern neoclassical economics – a case study in the light of Ludwik Fleck’s ‘harmony of deception’
by Arne Heise - 19-38 Reconsidering economics in relation to sustainable development and democracy
by Peter Söderbaum - 39-64 The unrealistic realist philosophy. The ontology of econometrics revisited
by Mariusz Maziarz - 65-105 Economic essays (part one): toward a realistic concept of choice
by Frederic B. Jennings Jr. - 106-111 A Review of Piero Ferri, Minsky’s Moment. An Insider’s View on the Economics of Hyman Minsky, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2019, 252 pp., ISBN 978-1-78897-372-4
by Andreas Stamate-Stefan - 112-112 IN MEMORIAM: Immanuel Wallerstein (1930-2019)
by Richard E. Lee
May 2019, Volume 12, Issue 2
- 1-30 Economic experiments versus physical science experiments: an ontology-based approach
by María Caamaño-Alegre & José Caamaño-Alegre - 31-53 Friedman’s instrumentalism in F53. A Weberian reading
by Peter Galbács - 54-74 On Amartya Sen’s concept of sympathy
by Mark Peacock - 75-96 The Theory of Moral Sentiments and The Wealth of Nations. Ethics, jurisprudence and political economy throughout the intellectual history of Adam Smith
by Pilar Piqué - 97-118 Morality and value neutrality in economics: a dualist view
by Cheng Li - 119-124 Review of Handbook on the History of Economic Analysis, edited by Gilbert Faccarello and Heinz D. Kurz, Edward Elgar Publishing, Northhampton, MA, 2018, 3 volumes, 1919 pp, Paperback, ISBN 978-1-78536-131-9
by Gabriel Mursa & Andreea Iacobuță - 125-131 Review of Colin White, A History of the Global Economy. The Inevitable Accident, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018, hb, ix+495 pages, ISBN 978-1-78897-197-3
by George Șerban-Oprescu - 132-136 Review of Venkat Venkatasubramanian, How Much Inequality is Fair? Mathematical Principles of a Moral, Optimal, and Stable Capitalist Society, New York, Columbia University Press, 2017, xxi+279 pp., hb, ISBN 978-0-231-18072-6
by Valentin Cojanu
November 2018, Volume 12, Issue 1
- 1-35 Financial bubbles and their magic: asset price as a heroic journey in the financial markets
by Alexandru (alec) BĂLĂŞESCU & Apurv Jain - 36-64 Negative and positive liberty and the freedom to choose in Isaiah Berlin and Jean-Jacques Rousseau
by Stefan Collignon - 65-88 Classical economics must not become history
by Ion POHOAŢĂ & Delia-Elena DIACONAȘU & Vladimir-Mihai CRUPENSCHI - 89-111 Ecce Homo-Economicus? The Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hide syndrome of the economic man in the context of natural resources scarcity and environmental externalities
by Panos KALIMERIS - 112-125 Critical comments on the philosophical context of Ludwig von Mises’s ‘Human action’
by Alexandru A. POPOVICI - 126-131 Review of Tavasci, Daniela and Luigi Ventimiglia (eds.), Teaching the History of Economic Thought. Integrating Historical Perspectives into Modern Economics, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018, hb, vi+150 pages, ISBN 978-1-78811-347-2
by George ŞERBAN-OPRESCU - 132-135 Review of Max Haiven, Art after Money, Money after Art; Creative Strategies Against Financialization, London: Pluto Press, 2018, 279 pp., pb. £19,99, ISBN 978-074533824
by Georgios PAPADOPOULOS
May 2018, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 1-28 Crises, confidence, and animal spirits:exploring subjectivity in the dualism of Descartes and Keynes
by Sonya Marie Scott - 29-36 Descartes and the notion of animal spirits: a brief historico-philosophical remark on Sonya Marie Scott’s ‘Crises, confidence, and animal spirits: exploring subjectivity in the dualism of Descartes and Keynes’
by Kurt Smith - 37-66 Reclaiming the University: transforming economics as a discipline
by Arne Heise - 67-80 A comment on the law of supply and demand
by M. Northrup Buechner - 81-94 A comment on ‘Comment on the law of supply and demand’
by Emil Dinga
November 2017, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 1-26 How to transform economics? A philosophical appraisal
by Deniz Kellecioglu - 27-52 The order of social sciences: sociology in dialogue with neighbouring disciplines
by Dieter Bögenhold - 53-82 Smith’s invisible hand: controversy is needed
by Flavia Di Mario & Andrea Micocci - 83-102 Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
by Soumitra Sharma - 103-132 A multidisciplinary-economic framework of analysis
by Piet Keizer
May 2017, Volume 10, Issue 2
- 5-46 Economics, chrematistics, oikos and polis in Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas
by José Luis CENDEJAS BUENO - 47-64 ‘Growth in a Time of Debt’ as an example of the logical-positivist science
by Mariusz MAZIARZ - 65-101 The dominion of means over ends. Modern bank credit and Max Weber’s irrational rationalization
by Domenico CORTESE - 102-124 Economic theory in historical perspective
by Lefteris TSOULFIDIS - 125-131 Review of Ajit Sinha, A Revolution in Economic Theory: The Economics of Piero Sraffa, Palgrave Macmillan, 2016, x + 244 pages, ISBN 978-3319306155
by Romar CORREA
November 2016, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 5-27 Aristotle on justice in exchange:commensurability by fiat
by Mark S. PEACOCK - 28-57 Economic crisis, economic methodology and the scientific ideal of physics
by Stavros A. DRAKOPOULOS - 58-80 Planning horizons as an ordinal entropic measure of organization
by Frederic B. JENNINGS JR. - 81-101 ‘Why has economics turned out this way?’ A socio-economic note on the explanation of monism in economics
by Arne HEISE - 102-105 Review of Altug Yalcintas, Intellectual Path Dependence in Economics: Why economists do not reject refuted theories, Routledge, 2016, hb, xiv + 173 pages, ISBN 978-1-138-01617-0
by Valentin COJANU - 106-109 Review of Mary Godwin, Ethics and Diversity in Business Management Education. A Sociological Study with International Scope, Heidelberg, Springer-Verlag, 2015, eb, x + 94 pages, ISBN 978-3-662-46654-4
by Stipe BUZAR
May 2016, Volume 9, Issue 2
- 5-42 The case for increasing returns (2): the methods of planning horizons
by Frederic B. JENNINGS JR. - 43-70 Poor countries and development: a critique of Nicole Hassoun and a defense of the argument for good institutional quality
by Ronald Olufemi BADRU - 71-84 Rawls and Piketty: the philosophical aspects of economic inequality
by Goran Sunajko - 85-104 Slow living and the green economy
by Diana-Eugenia Ioncica & Eva-Cristina Petrescu - 105-108 Review of Potrosacka kultura i konzumerizam [Consumer Culture and Consumerism], edited by Snjezana Colic, Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar, Zagreb, 2013, pb, ISBN 978-953-7964-00-9, 206 pages
by Ana Maskalan - 109-113 Review of Dani Rodrik, Economics Rules: Why Economics Works, When It Fails, and How to Tell the Difference, Oxford University Press, 2015, hb, ISBN 978-0-19-873689-9, xi+253 pages
by Dorin Iulian Chiritoiu - 114-118 Review of J. E. King, Advanced Introduction to Post Keynesian Economics, Cheltenham (UK), Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015, pb, ISBN 978-1-78254-843-0,x + 139 pages
by Valentin Cojanu
November 2015, Volume 9, Issue 1
- 1 The case for increasing returns I: ‘The Hicksian Getaway’ and ‘The Hirshleifer Rescue’
by Frederic B. Jennings Jr. - 2 Economics in times of crisis. In search of a new paradigm in economic sciences
by Joanna Dzionek-Kozlowska - 3 The welfare costs of rent-seeking: a methodologically individualist and subjectivist revision
by Michael Makovi - 4 Economics of paternalism: the hidden costs of self-commanding strategies
by Christophe Salvat - 5 A criterion for realism, with an application to behavioral economic models
by Gustavo Marqués & Diego Weisman - 6 Review of The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis: Rethinking modernity in a new epoch, edited by Clive Hamilton, Christophe Bonneuil and François Gemenne, Routledge, London, 2015, pbk, ISBN 978-1-138-821124-8, pp. 187+xi
by Valentin Cojanu
May 2015, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 1 Editorial
by Valentin Cojanu - 2 Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
by Olivier Ouzilou - 3 Work, recognition and subjectivization: some remarks about the modernity of Kojève’s interpretation of Hegel
by Richard Sobel - 4 Expiration of private property rights: a note
by Walter E. Block - 5 ‘Ups’ and ‘downs’ in metaphor use: the case of increase / decrease metaphors in Spanish economic discourse
by Anca Pecican - 6 A review of the Granger-causality fallacy
by Mariusz Maziarz - 7 A brief history of international trade thought: From pre-doctrinal contributions to the 21st century heterodox international economics
by Carmen Elena Dorobat - 8 Review of Philip Mirowski, Never Let a Serious Crisis Go to Waste: How Neoliberalism Survived the Financial Meltdown, New York, Verso, 1st edition, 2013, ISBN: 978-1-781-68079-7, 384 pages
by Serban Brebenel - 9 Review of Abdul Azim Islahi, History of Islamic Economic Thought: Contributions of Muslim Scholars to Economic Thought and Analysis, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham (UK), hb, 2014, ISBN 9781784711375, viii+125 pages
by Valentin Cojanu
November 2014, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1 Social mechanisms and social causation
by Friedel Weinert - 2 Modeling exogenous moral norms
by Ross A. Tippit - 3 Shifting economics: fundamental questions and Amartya K. Sen’s pragmatic humanism
by Tara Natarajan - 4 A comment on scarcity
by M. Northrup Buechner - 5 Commentary on secrets of economics editors: an unintended ethnography of economics
by Utku Balaban - 6 Review of Jérôme Ballet, Damien Bazin, Jean-Luc Dubois, and François-Régis Mahieu, Freedom, Responsibility and Economics of the Person, London, Routledge, ebk, 2014, 174 pp., ISBN 978-0-203-79633-7
by Carmen Elena Dorobat - 7 Review of Joseph E. Stiglitz and Bruce C. Greenwald, Creating a Learning Society: A New Approach to Growth, Development and Social Progress, New York, Columbia University Press, 2014, hb, 34.95$, 680 pp., ISBN 978-0-231-15214-3
by Alina Toarna
May 2014, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 1 Unusual Humean issues in materialistic political economy
by Andrea Micocci - 2 Growth theory after Keynes, part II: 75 years of obstruction by the mainstream economics culture
by Hendrik Van den Berg - 3 Behavioural controversy concerning homo economicus: a Humean perspective
by Khandakar Elahi - 4 Dividing a cake (or) Distributional values in the measurement of economic inequality: an expository note
by Subbu Subramanian - 5 Review of Cheryle Desha and Karlso ‘Charlie’ Hargroves, Higher Education and Sustainable Development: A model for curriculum renewal, London: Routledge, 2014, 268 pp., hb, $180.00, 9781844078592, pb, $49.95, ISBN 9781844078608
by R. Edward di Collalto - 6 Review of Ole Bjerg, Making Money: The Philosophy of Crisis Capitalism, London: Verso, 2014, 256 pp., pb, £19.99, ISBN 9781781682654
by Georgios Papadopoulos - 7 RReview of David Stuckler and Sanjay Basu, The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills, New York, Basic Books, 2013, hb, 240 pp., $26.99, ISBN 9780465063987
by Jorge Tamames
November 2013, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1 Growth theory after Keynes, part I: the unfortunate suppression of the Harrod-Domar model
by Hendrik Van den Berg - 2 Fairness through regulation? Reflections on a cosmopolitan approach to global finance
by Marta Božina Beroš & Marin Beroš - 3 On the problem of scale: Spinozistic sovereignty as the logical foundation of constitutional economics
by Benjamen F. Gussen - 4 The ethics of New Development Economics: is the Experimental Approach to Development Economics morally wrong?
by Stéphane J. Baele - 5 Research note on an experimental approach to the intrinsic motivations of corruption
by Valeria Burdea - 6 Review of Resilient Liberalism in Europe’s Political Economy, edited by Vivien A. Schmidt and Mark Thatcher, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2013, 469 pp., $32.99, ISBN 9781107613973
by Chantel F. Pheiffer - 7 Review of The Elgar Companion to Recent Economic Methodology, edited by John B. Davis and D. Wade Hands, Cheltenham, UK; Northampton, MA, USA, Edward Elgar, 2011, hb, 542 pp., ISBN 9781848447547
by Lucia Ovidia Vreja - 8 Review of Mark Blyth, Austerity. The History of a Dangerous Idea, New York: Oxford University Press, 2013, 304 pp., hb, $16.95, ISBN 9780199828302
by Juan Camilo Blanco
May 2013, Volume 6, Issue 2
- 1 The ‘desire for money:’ Aristotelian blind spot in the field of economics? A French heterodox point of view
by Richard Sobel - 2 Subjective preferences and alternative costs
by William Barnett II & Walter E. Block - 3 Money and value: a synthesis of the state theory of money and original institutional economics
by Georgios Papadopoulos - 4 The missing link: From Kautilya’s The Arthashastra to modern economics
by Marinko Škare - 5 The economic consequences of homo economicus: neoclassical economic theory and the fallacy of market optimality
by David Calnitsky & Asher Dupuy-Spencer - 6 Review of The Social Sciences and Democracy, edited by Jeroen Van Bouwel, London, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, 268 pp., £58 hb, ISBN 9780230224391
by Ioana Negru - 7 Review of James E. Alvey, A Short History of Ethics and Economics: The Greeks, Cheltenham (UK), Edward Elgar Publishing, 2011, x+184 pp, hb, ISBN 9781847202017
by Dragos Bîgu - 8 Review of Pranab Bardhan, Awakening Giants, Feet of Clay: Assessing the Economic Rise of China and India, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2010, 172pp, hb, ISBN 9780691129945
by Géraud Bablon
November 2012, Volume 6, Issue 1
- 1 A theory of planning horizons (2): the foundation for an ethical economics
by Frederic B. Jennings Jr. - 2 The Hegelian dialectics of global imbalances
by Célestin Monga - 3 Competitive markets, collective action, and the Big Box Retailer problem
by Brent D. Beal - 4 Observing productivity: what it might mean to be productive when viewed through the lens of Complexity Theory
by Manfred Füllsack - 5 Deep History: a rejoinder
by David Laibman - 6 Between a rock and a hard place: second thoughts on Laibman’s Deep History and the theory of punctuated equilibrium with regard to intellectual evolution
by Altug Yalcintas - 7 Review of Vito Tanzi, Government versus Markets – The Changing Economic Role of the State, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2011, 376pp, Hardback, ISBN 978-1-107-09653-0
by Xavier Landes - 8 Review of Paul Turpin, The Moral Rhetoric of Political Economy: Justice and Modern Economic Thought, Routledge, London & New York, 2011, pp. 163
by Sergiu Bãlan
May 2012, Volume 5, Issue 2
- 5-37 A theory of planning horizons (1): market design in a post-neoclassical world
by Frederic B. Jennings Jr. - 38-63 Complexity and the culture of economics: a sociological and inter-disciplinary analysis
by Hendrik Van den Berg - 64-83 The economist as shaman: revisioning our role for a sustainable, provisioning economy
by Molly Scott Cato - 84-108 Behavioural Procedural Models – a multipurpose mechanistic account
by Leonardo Ivarola & Gustavo Marqués - 109-122 The evolution of merchant moral thought in Tokugawa Japan
by Ryan Langrill - 123-125 Review of Amitava Krishna Dutt and Benjamin Radcliff (eds.), Happiness, Economics and Politics. Towards a Multi-Disciplinary Approach, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2009, 362 pp
by Elena E. Nicolae - 126-129 Review of Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty, Public Affairs, 2012, 303 pp
by Hannah Cockrell - 130-132 Review of Joseph Stiglitz, Freefall: America, Free Markets, and the Sinking of the World Economy, W. W. Norton & Company, 2010, 361 pp
by Kathryn Cohen - 133-136 Review of Eric Helleiner, Stefano Pagliari and Hubert Zimmerman (editors), Global Finance in Crisis: The Politics of International Regulatory Change, Routledge, 2010, pp. 216
by Linh Dao - 137-140 Review of Niall Ferguson, Civilization: The West and the Rest, Allen Lane, Penguin Books, London, 2011, pp. 385
by Andrei Josan - 141-143 Review of Branko Milanovic, The Haves and the Have-Nots: A Brief and Idiosyncratic History of Global Inequality, Basic Books, 2011, 258 pp
by Elizabeth Karin - 144-147 Review of David Roodman, Due Diligence: An Impertinent Inquiry into Microfinance, Center for Global Development, 2012, 365 pp
by Annie Sholar - 148-151 Review of Jose Huerta de Soto, The Austrian School. Market Order and Entrepreneurial Creativity, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2011, 129 pp
by Irina Ion
November 2011, Volume 5, Issue 1
- 5-34 Ethics and economics, today and in the past
by James E. Alvey - 35-61 From the search for natural laws to the discovery of contingent rules in economics
by Nicolas Postel - 62-89 Finance contemporaine et postmodernisme: l’expression d’un capitalisme tardif
by Christophe Schinckus - 90-119 The Christian ethics of socioeconomic development promoted by the Catholic Social Teaching
by Edgardo Bucciarelli & Nicola Mattoscio & Tony E. Persico - 120-147 An inquiry into the explanatory virtues of transaction cost economics
by Lukasz Hardt - 148-167 Implications of the Foucauldian decentralization of economics
by Zulfiqar Ali - 168-182 Review essay on David Laibman, Deep History: A Study in Social Evolution and Human Potential
by Altug Yalcintas
May 2011, Volume 4, Issue 2
- 5-14 Are egalitarians really vulnerable to the Levelling-Down Objection and the Divided World Example?
by Subbu Subramanian - 15-36 The capacity to choose: reformulating the concept of choice in economic theory
by Mark S. Peacock - 37-64 Critical Realism versus Social Constructivism in International Relations
by Roxana Bobulescu - 65-92 More than a sum of its parts: A Keynesian epistemology of statistics
by Nicholas Werle - 93-104 There are no such things as ‘commodities’: a research note
by Rupert Read
November 2010, Volume 4, Issue 1
- 5-18 Critiques and developments in worldsystems analysis: an introduction to the special collection
by Richard E. Lee - 19-57 Nonwaged peasants in the modern world-system: African households as dialectical units of capitalist exploitation and indigenous resistance, 1890-1930
by Wilma A. Dunaway - 58-103 “This lofty mountain of silver could conquer the whole world”: Potosí and the political ecology of underdevelopment, 1545-1800
by Jason Moore - 104-145 The rise, maturity and geographic diffusion of the cotton industry, 1760-1900
by Florence Molk - 146-183 “The dangerous classes”: Hugo Grotius and seventeenth-century piracy as a primitive anti-systemic movement
by Eric Wilson - 184-211 Structures of knowledge in the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic, 17311980
by Sanem Güvenç-Salgirli
May 2010, Volume 3, Issue 2
- 5-57 Malthus’s idea of a moral and political science
by Sergio Cremaschi - 58-73 Financial stability requires macroeconomic foundations of macroeconomics
by Sergio Rossi - 74-96 Towards a critical realist-inspired economic methodology
by Bjørn-Ivar Davidsen - 97-121 Because I said so: the persistence of mainstream policy advice
by Nathaniel Cline & Kirsten Ford & Matías Vernengo - 122-133 Schumpeter’s theory of leadership: a brief sketch
by Panayotis Michaelides & Ourania Kardasi - 134-152 The internal consistency of perfect competition
by Jakob Kapeller & Stephan Pühringer - 153-163 On technological change and stage evolution in the works of Seneca and Adam Smith
by Christos P. Baloglou - 164-172 Commentary on black political economy
by Curtis Haynes Jr. - 173-177 A Review of Christian Arnsperger, Full Spectrum Economics. Towards an Inclusive and Emancipatory Social Science, Routledge, 2010, 277 pp
by Irina Zgreabãn - 173-177 A Review of Jean-François Ponsot and Sergio Rossi (eds), The Political Economy of Monetary Circuits: Tradition and Change in Post-Keynesian Economics, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, 264 pp
by Rémi Stellian
November 2009, Volume 3, Issue 1
- 5-24 The social organisation of epistemology in macroeconomic policy work: the case of the IMF
by Richard H. R. Harper - 25-43 The foundation of Marx’s concept of value in the Manuscripts of 1844
by Laurent Baronian - 44-74 Institutionalism as the way of unification of the heterodox theories
by Nicolas Postel & Richard Sobel - 75-89 Loanable funds, liquidity preference: structure, past and present
by Romar Correa - 90-107 A new framework for the analysis of contemporary financial markets: the need for pluralistic approaches
by Mitja Stefancic - 108-111 A review of David Colander, The Making of a European Economist, Cheltenham, UK, Edward Elgar, 2009, 190 pp
by Mariana Nicolae - 112-114 A review of George A. Akerlof and Robert J. Shiller, Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism, Princeton University Press, 2009, 264 pp
by Cornel Ban - 115-120 A Review of Moral Markets: the Critical Role of Values in the Economy, Edited by Paul J. Zak, Princeton/Oxford, Princeton University Press, 2008, 386 pp
by Thomas Wells - 121-127 A Review of The Genesis of Innovation: Systemic Linkages between Knowledge and the Market, Edited by Blandine Laperche, Dimitri Uzunidis, Nick von Tunzelmann, Cheltenham UK, Edward Elgar, 2008, 285 pp
by Dana Gârdu - 128-132 A Review of Marshall and Schumpeter on Evolution: Economic Sociology of Capitalist Development, Edited by Yuichi Shionoya and Tamotsu Nishizawa, Cheltenham UK, Edward Elgar, 2008, 285 pp
by Andreas Stamate
May 2009, Volume 2, Issue 2
- 5-33 Economics and religion – a personalist perspective
by Petre Comsa & Costea Munteanu - 34-77 Six choice metaphors and their social implications
by Frederic B. Jennings Jr. - 78-98 The inheritance of heterodox economic thought: an examination of history of economic thought textbooks
by Mary V. Wrenn - 99-120 The epistemology of modern finance
by Xavier De Scheemaekere - 121-124 A review of Stephen T. Ziliak and Deirdre N. McCloskey, The Cult of Statistical Significance. How the Standard Error Costs Us Jobs, Justice, and Lives, The University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 2008, 320 pages
by Tamás Dusek - 125-127 A review of Peter Söderbaum, Understanding Sustainability Economics. Towards Pluralism in Economics, London, Sterling/VA: earthscan, 2008, 158 pages
by Karl Georg Zinn - 128-133 A review of Ralph Harris in His Own Words, the Selected Writings of Lord Harris, Edited by Colin Robinson, Cheltenham, UK, Edward Elgar and the Institute of Economic Affairs, 2008, 343 pages
by Valentin Cojanu - 134-136 Commentary on Teaching Economics with Podcasts, Literature and Movies
by James Moulder
November 2008, Volume 2, Issue 1
- 5-19 Incentives and reflective equilibrium in distributive justice debates
by Julian Lamont - 20-54 The knowledge economy/society: the latest example of “Measurement without theory”?
by Les Oxley & Paul Walker & David Thorns & Hong Wang - 55-75 Methodology and the practice of economists – a philosophical approach
by Bjørn-Ivar Davidsen - 76-114 „Social embeddedness”: how new economic sociology goes into the offensive and meets the own roots
by Dieter Bögenhold - 115-136 Not anything goes: a case for a restricted pluralism
by Gustavo Marqués & Diego Weisman - 137-141 Book review: Gilles Dostaler, Keynes and his battles, Edgar Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, Northampton, MA, USA, 2007, 384 pages
by Mircea T. Maniu - 142-146 Book review: Cristina Neesham, Human and social progress: projects and perspectives, VDM Verlag, Saarbrücken, 2008, 220 pages
by James Moulder - 147-152 Book review: Akop P. Nazaretyan, Anthropology of violence and culture of self-organization. Essays in evolutionary historical psychology, 2nd edition, Moscow, URSS, 2008, 256 pages (in Russian)
by Andrey Korotayev
March 2008, Volume 1, Issue 2
- 5-25 Pluralism and Heterodoxy: Introduction to the Special Issue
by Andrew Mearman - 26-50 Methodological Monism in Economics
by Tamás Dusek