Content
Annual 2024, Volume 1, Issue 1
- 1-17 Perspectives on interpersonal utility comparisons: an analysis of selected models
by Afschin Gandjour - 18-47 Plato, Aristotle, and Locke on the accumulation of wealth and natural law
by José Luis Cendejas Bueno - 48-84 Agency, functionalism, and all that. A Sraffian view
by Sergio Cesaratto - 85-118 The independence of central banks: a reductio ad absurdum
by Ion Pohoață; Delia-Elena Diaconașu; Ioana Negru - 119-155 The Historicity of Economic Sciences: The Main Epistemological Ruptures
by Alain Herscovici - 156-192 The Economic Cultures of Fear and Love
by Frederic Jennings Jr. - 193-225 Phenomenology and intersubjectivity in political economy: an anti-perfectionist perspective
by Stefano Solari - 226-243 The concept of relation in methodological individualism and holism: a reply to a functionalist critique
by Giancarlo Ianulardo; Aldo Stella - 244-280 Towards a Contemporary Philosophical Re-interpretation of Thorstein Veblenʼs Theory of Instincts and Institutions: An Axiomatic Approach
by Uroš Kranjc - 281-308 The Interdisciplinary Research Programme of Methodological Individualism: Back to Its Foundations
by Francisco J. Bellido - 309-312 Review of Rodney Edvinsson, An economic philosophy of production, work and consumption: a transhistorical framework, New York, NY, Routledge, 2023, vii + 199 pp., hb, ISBN 978-0-367-52225-4
by Alexandru Patruti - 313-318 Human-Centred Economics The Living Standards of Nations, 2024 Palgrave Macmillan, 356pp. Richard Samans
by Tiago Camarinha Lopes - 319-324 Review of Valentin Lazea, O Istorie Morală a Politicilor Monetare şi Fiscale [A Moral History of Monetary and Fiscal Policies], Bucureşti, Publica, 2023, 176 pp., 978-606-722-595-2
by Cezar Teclean - 325-330 Review of Having Too Much: Philosophical Essays on Limitarianism, edited by Ingrid Robeyns, Cambridge, UK, Open Book Publishers, 2023
by Valentin Cojanu
Annual 2023, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-31 Can a Catholic be Liberal? Roman Catholicism and Liberalism in a Political Economy Perspective (1800–1970)
by Stefano Solari - 32-68 Ways of Knowing Agency and Development: notes on the philosophy of science and the conduct and use of inquiry
by Pablo Garcés-Velástegui - 69-99 Scarcity Concept in the contemporary mainstream economic science: an analysis of its ontological and epistemological ambiguity
by 1 Daniel Durán-Sandoval;2 Gemma Durán-Romero; 3 Francesca Uleri - 100-129 Reading and interpreting Ibn Khaldun's economic philosophy
by Ahmed Souaiaia. - 130-161 'We need to offer something better to the scholars of the future.' Which way forward for heterodox economics?
by Arne Heise - 162-181 An essay on the need to redefine economics for the sake of a human economy
by Arjo Klamer - 182-196 A Plea for Pluralism
by Stephen Marglin - 196-221 The Future of Heterodox Economics
by Teresa Ghilarducci; Zachary Knaus; Richard McGahey; William Milberg; Drew Landes. - 222-242 The Hybrid Vigor of Heterodox Economics: A Feminist Perspective
by Nancy Folbre - 243-253 Heterodoxy Needs Institutional Backing
by Bruno Frey; Andre Briviba. - 254-279 THE FUTURE OF POST-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS: Post-Keynesian Economics at 50
by Louis-Philippe Rochon - 280-309 Power structures in economics and society: Some remarks on the future of non-mainstream economics
by Rouven Reinke - 310-318 Review of Șerban Oana, Cultural Capital and Creative Communication: (Anti-)Modern and (Non-)Eurocentric Perspectives
by Andreea Ioana Vlad - 319-323 Review of Jon D. Erickson, The Progress Illusion: Reclaiming Our Future from the Fairytale of Economics, Washington, DC, Island Press, 2022, xx + 252 pp., hb, ISBN 978-1-64-283252-5
by Alexandru Pătruți
April 2022, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 1-34 Pragmatic behaviour: pragmatism as a philosophy for behavioural economics
by Pablo Garcés - 35-61 Kenneth Boulding: a Friends’ economist
by Robert H. Scott - 62-94 Understanding how systemic change happens – marketisation and de-marketisation
by Adam Fforde - 95-123 The apodictic method and the dialogue between theology and science (II)
by Fr Petre Comșa; Costea Munteanu - 124-157 ‘Freedom’ on the Road to Ruin: An Australian Apology to America’s Freedom-Loving Hard Right
by L Duhs - 158-195 Relation of Carl Menger's philosophy of economics to Auguste Comte's positivism
by Alexandru Popovici - 196-226 Towards a unity of sense: A critical analysis of the concept of relation in methodological individualism and holism in Economics
by 1 Giancarlo Ianulardo ; 2 Aldo Stella. - 227-244 Buddhist economics as a return to rational model of economic management
by 1 Viktor Zinchenko ; 2 Mykhailo Boichenko - 245-256 Nietzsche and Fractal Geometry: a philosophical continuity
by Leandro Gualario - 257-281 Towards a Theory of Conversation in Political Economy
by Gian Paolo Faella - 282-310 The Opportunity Costs of Neoclassical Economics
by Frederic Jennings Jr. - 311-319 Review of Margherita Zanasi, Economic Thought in Modern China: Market and Consumption, c.1500–1937, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, 252 pages, ISBN: 978-1-108-49993-4
by Jiarui Wu - 320-323 Review of Ralf Lüfter, The Ethics of Economic Responsibility
by Toni Gibea - 324-331 Review of Cultural Values in Political Economy, edited by J.P. Singh, Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 2020, 248 pp, hbk, ISBN 9781503612686
by Raul Morosan - 332-338 Review of Lehmann, P.-J., Liberalism and Capitalism Today, London, Hoboken: ISTE-Wiley, 2021, 214 pp, ISBN 978-1-78630-689-0
by Ionuț Văduva
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
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