Content
June 2024, Volume 37, Issue 2
- 117-131 The symbolic work of prices
by Akash Miharia & Jan Osborn & Bart J. Wilson - 133-152 The wisdom of classical political economy in economics: incorporated or lost?
by Gabriel F. Benzecry & Daniel J. Smith - 153-177 Opportunity discovery or judgment? Value investing’s incompatibility with Austrian economics revisited
by David J. Rapp & Andrea Rapp & Trevor Daher - 179-197 Refuting Samuelson’s capitulation on the re-switching of techniques in the Cambridge capital controversy
by Carlo Milana - 199-211 Am I a good puppet? A review essay of Escaping Paternalism: Rationality, Behavioral Economics, and Public Policy
by André Quintas - 213-224 Freedom in context: A review essay of The Dialectics of Liberty
by Alexander W. Craig - 225-228 Scott Sumner, The Money Illusion: Market Monetarism, the Great Recession, and the Future of Monetary Policy
by Bryan P. Cutsinger - 229-232 Caleb S. Fuller, No Free Lunch: Six Economic Lies You’ve Been Taught and Probably Believe
by David S. Lucas - 233-236 James Tooley, Really Good Schools: Global Lessons for High-Caliber, Low-Cost Education, Oakland: Independent Institute, 2021. xx + 404 pages. 29.95 USD (hardback)
by Stephen G. Zimmer
March 2024, Volume 37, Issue 1
- 1-34 What Can Industrial Policy Do? Evidence from Singapore
by Bryan Cheang - 35-54 Information, Uncertainty & Espionage
by Peter J Phillips & Gabriela Pohl - 55-80 Soft monetary constraint and shortage in the European sovereign debt economy
by Eric Magnin & Nikolay Nenovsky - 81-93 The Firm as Observer: Data Resources and Firm Longevity in Bylund’s Austrian Theory of the Firm
by Mark A. DeWeaver - 95-103 Liberalism, rhetoric, and how to be post-modern: a review essay of Deirdre Nansen McCloskey’s why liberalism works: how true Liberal values produce a freer, more equal, prosperous world for all
by Douglas B. Rasmussen & Douglas J. Den Uyl - 105-108 David M. Levy and Sandra J. Peart, Towards and Economics of Natural Equals: A Documentary History of the Early Virginia School, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. xvi + 292 pages. 110.00 USD (hardback)
by Steven G. Medema - 109-112 John Kay and Mervyn King, Radical Uncertainty: Decision-Making Beyond the Numbers, London: W.W. Norton & Company, 2020. xvi + 528 Pages. 30.00 USD (hardback)
by Anthony J. Evans - 113-116 Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall, Manufacturing Militarism: U.S. Government Propaganda in the War on Terror, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2021. xiv + 248 Pages. 26.00 USD (paperback)
by Thomas K. Duncan
December 2023, Volume 36, Issue 4
- 501-514 Austrian economics as a relevant research program
by Daniel J. Smith - 515-539 The Harvard-MIT complexity approach to development and Austrian economics: Similarities and policy implications
by Vicente Moreno-Casas - 541-566 Property and popery: Is Pope Francis’s teaching on private property radical?
by Philip Booth - 567-588 Rethinking the role of human Capital in Growth Models
by Stephen G. Zimmer - 589-604 Does capitalism have a future? A review essay of Peter Boettke’s The Struggle for a Better World and Daniel Bromley’s Possessive Individualism: A Crisis of Capitalism
by Ilia Murtazashvili - 605-609 Michelle Schwarze, recognizing resentment: Sympathy, injustice, and liberal political thought
by Kristen R. Collins - 611-615 Alexander Linsbichler, Was Ludwig von Mises a Conventionalist? A New Analysis of the Epistemology of the Austrian School of Economics
by Per L. Bylund - 617-622 Peter C. Earle and William J. Luther (Eds.), The Gold Standard: Retrospect and Prospect, Great Barrington: American Institute for Economic Research, 2021. 342 Pages. 18.00 USD (paperback)
by Anthony J. Evans
September 2023, Volume 36, Issue 3
- 1-21 Breaking out of the Kirznerian box: A reply to Sautet
by Matthew McCaffrey & Nicolai J. Foss & Peter G. Klein & Joseph T. Salerno - 357-382 Commercial Friendships During a Pandemic
by Virgil Henry Storr & Rachael K. Behr & Michael R. Romero - 383-401 Assumed military solutions to central economic planning problems: evidence from soviet military journals
by Garrett R. Wood - 403-415 Hermeneutics and phenomenology in the social sciences: Lessons from the Austrian school of economics case
by Gabriel J. Zanotti & Agustina Borella & Nicolás Cachanosky - 417-439 Lachmann’s transformation
by Fabio Barbieri - 441-460 Teaching economics, defending the free market and justifying government intervention: The ABCs of Buchanan’s political economy
by Alain Marciano - 483-491 Alex Nowrasteh and Benjamin Powell, Wretched Refuse?: The Political Economy of Immigration and Institutions
by Alexandre Padilla - 493-496 Nick Cowen, neoliberal social justice: Rawls unveiled
by Brian Kogelmann - 497-500 Noreena Hertz, The Lonely Century: How to Restore Human Connection in a World That’s Pulling Apart
by Rachael Behr
June 2023, Volume 36, Issue 2
- 141-143 Carl Menger: a reappraisal for the 21st century: an introduction to the symposium
by Daniel Nientiedt - 145-162 Economics as a life-science: The enduring significance of Carl Menger’s individualist-evolutionary research program
by Viktor J. Vanberg - 163-182 Menger’s exact laws, the role of knowledge, and welfare economics
by Malte Dold & Mario J. Rizzo - 183-203 Monitoring, metering and Menger: A conciliatory basis for a genuine institutional economics
by Peter J. Boettke & Rosolino A. Candela - 205-215 Menger’s account of the origin of money as a case study in the evolution of institutions
by Daniel Nientiedt - 217-245 Menger’s precursors in the German subjective-value tradition and his advancements in the theory of wants and goods
by David A. Harper & Anthony M. Endres - 247-269 Carl Menger’s Smithian contributions to German political economy
by Stefan Kolev & Erwin Dekker - 271-287 Menger and Jevons: beliefs and things
by Sandra J. Peart & David M. Levy - 289-310 Diamonds are not forever: Adam Smith and Carl Menger on value and relative status
by Jimena Hurtado & Maria Pia Paganelli - 311-330 Ethical Economics or Economical Ethics? Considerations out of Carl Menger
by Erik W. Matson - 331-355 Carl menger on economic policy: “Exact laws,” institutional prerequisites, and economic liberalism
by Richard Ebeling
March 2023, Volume 36, Issue 1
- 1-21 The market as foreground: The ontological status of the market in market process theory
by Solomon Stein & Virgil Henry Storr - 23-41 The artist as entrepreneur
by Ennio E. Piano & Rania Al-Bawwab - 43-60 Business cycles and the internal dynamics of firms
by Kushal K. Reddy & Vipin P. Veetil - 61-79 The Austrian school of Madrid
by Cristóbal Matarán López - 81-89 How should an Austrian economist teach the theory of the firm? Do the equi-marginal conditions still apply?
by Peter Lewin - 91-97 Do markets corrupt our morals compared to what?
by Chad Van Schoelandt - 99-106 Do disruptions to the market process corrupt our morals?
by Rosemarie Fike - 107-114 The missing monster: markets make us moral, but what about politics?
by Brianne Wolf - 115-123 The moral ambiguity of the invisible hand
by Rob Garnett - 125-139 Who wins in the game of the market?
by Ginny Seung Choi & Virgil Henry Storr
December 2022, Volume 35, Issue 4
- 411-421 Our curious task
by Anne Rathbone Bradley - 423-443 Schumpeter the incomplete rhetorician
by Deirdre Nansen McCloskey - 445-465 Malcom McLean, containerization and entrepreneurship
by Rosolino A. Candela & Peter J. Jacobsen & Kacey Reeves - 467-480 Creative destruction: getting ahead and staying ahead in a capitalist economy
by Randall G. Holcombe - 481-515 Carl Menger, F.A. Hayek and the evolutionary strand in Austrian economics
by Viktor J. Vanberg - 517-529 An Austrian critique of the neoclassical approach to indirect taxes
by Alan G. Futerman & Luciano Villegas - 531-546 Anti-democratic revolutionaries or democratic reformers? A review essay of Janek Wasserman’s The Marginal Revolutionaries: How Austrian Economists Fought the War of Ideas
by Stefan Kolev - 547-560 Ordoliberalism: neither exclusively German nor an oddity. A review essay of Malte Dold’s and Tim Krieger’s Ordoliberalism and European Economic Policy: Between Realpolitik and Economic Utopia
by K. Horn - 561-566 Richard E. Wagner, Macroeconomics as Systems Theory: Transcending the Micro-Macro Dichotomy. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020. Xiii +313 pages. 119.99 USD (hardback)
by Jonathan W. Plante
September 2022, Volume 35, Issue 3
- 275-282 The ultimate resource after 40: A special issue against the grain
by Peter Jacobsen & Louis Rouanet - 283-301 Julian Simon, the problem of socio-ecological resilience and the “ultimate resource”: a reinterpretation
by Paul Dragos Aligica & Robert Gabriel Ciobanu - 303-314 The economic logic behind the ultimate resource
by Peter J. Boettke & Christopher J. Coyne - 315-322 How Might Econ 101 Change If Julian Simon’s “Ultimate Resource” Idea Were Incorporated into the Analysis?
by Donald J. Boudreaux - 323-341 The Division of Labor and Knowledge is Limited by the Division of Ownership Over the Ultimate Resource: The Role of Economies of Scope in Julian Simon
by Rosolino A. Candela - 343-358 Statogenic climate change? Julian Simon and Institutions
by Vincent Geloso - 359-381 Economists versus engineers: Two approaches to environmental problems
by Peter Jacobsen & Louis Rouanet - 383-405 The family and the state: a public choice perspective
by Clara E. Piano - 407-410 Mikayla Novak, Freedom in Contention: Social Movements and Liberal Political Economy. Lanham: Lexington, 2021. X + 247 Pages. USD 105.00 (hardback)
by Jayme Lemke
June 2022, Volume 35, Issue 2
- 143-161 Brazil’s road to serfdom
by Anna B. Faria & J. Robert Subrick - 163-176 Unmixing the metaphors of Austrian capital theory
by Cameron Harwick - 177-191 Young Mr. Mises and younger historicists: origins of Mises’s liberalism
by Mykola Bunyk & Leonid Krasnozhon - 193-203 Self-immolation
by Vladimir Vladimirovich Maltsev & Andrei Yurievich Yudanov - 205-233 Eugen Schmalenbach, Austrian economics, and German business economics
by Michael Olbrich & David J. Rapp & Florian Follert - 235-256 Teaching and learning Schumpeter: A dialogue between professor and student
by John T. Dalton & Andrew J. Logan - 257-266 The state, religion, and freedom: a review essay of Persecution & toleration
by Metin Coşgel - 267-270 Per L. Bylund, The Problem of Production: A New Theory of the Firm
by Henrique Schneider - 271-274 Stephanie Kelton, The Deficit Myth: Modern Monetary Theory and the Birth of the People’s Economy. New York: public affairs, 2020. Xi +325 pages. 30.00 USD (hardback)
by Thomas L. Hogan
March 2022, Volume 35, Issue 1
- 1-14 Regulatory ambiguity in the market for bitcoin
by William J. Luther - 15-37 War, money & economy: Inflation and production in the Fed and pre-Fed periods
by Thomas L. Hogan & Daniel J. Smith - 39-61 Hayek, Hicks, Radner and four equilibrium concepts: Perfect foresight, sequential, temporary, and rational expectations
by David Glasner - 63-88 The role of fractional-reserve banking in amplifying credit booms: Evidence from panel data
by Maciej Albinowski - 89-97 The upper turning point in the Austrian business cycle theory
by Anthony J. Evans & Nicolás Cachanosky & Robert Thorpe - 99-114 The great depression as a global currency crisis: An Argentine perspective
by Leonidas Zelmanovitz & Carlos Newland & Juan Carlos Rosiello - 115-128 Competition is (still) a tough weed: A review essay of Thomas Philippon’s The great reversal: How America gave up on free markets
by Louis Rouanet - 129-133 Steven Waldman, Sacred Liberty: America’s Long, Bloody, and Ongoing Struggle for Religious Freedom. New York: HarperOne, 2019. ix + 390 pages. USD 28.99 (hardback)
by Anthony Gill - 135-141 David Skarbek, The Puzzle of Prison Order: Why Life Behind Bars Varies Around the World
by Kaitlyn Woltz
December 2021, Volume 34, Issue 4
- 431-448 Socialism-in-practice was a nightmare, not Utopia: Ludwig von Mises’s critique of central planning and the fall of the Soviet Union
by Richard M. Ebeling - 449-463 Hayek on the essential dispersion of market knowledge
by Samuel B. Condic & Roger Morefield - 465-478 Adam Smith’s liberalism
by Carlos Rodríguez Braun - 479-493 Reservations on the classical Laffer curve
by Tchai Tavor & Limor Dina Gonen & Uriel Spiegel - 495-501 The Austrian Free Enterprise Ethic: A Mengerian Comment on Kirzner (2019)
by Per L. Bylund - 503-511 Public entrepreneurship, public choice and self-governance
by Paul Dragos Aligica - 513-515 Steven Horwitz: 1964–2021
by Peter Lewin - 517-522 Alain Bertaud, Order Without Design: How markets shape cities. Cambridge, MA: MIT press, 2018. Xiv + 419 pages. USD 40.00 (cloth)
by Bryon Carson - 523-527 Trent J. MacDonald, The Political Economy of Non-Territorial Exit: Cryptosecession. Northampton: Edward Elgar, 2019. x + 233 pages. USD 125.00 (hardback)
by Nathan Goodman
September 2021, Volume 34, Issue 3
- 341-346 Governance for living better together: A special issue on public administration and self-governance
by Stefanie Haeffele & Yuliya Yatsyshina - 347-359 A call for institutional analysis: practicing polycentric political economy in policy research
by Anne Hobson & Eileen Norcross - 361-371 Judicial engagement in classical Liberal public governance: a response and extension to Aligica, Boettke, and Tarko
by Jennifer Huddleston - 373-391 Coproduction of regulations under the administrative procedure act: How close is the US to a classical Liberal regulatory system?
by Jerry Ellig - 393-399 Democratic citizenship as problem solving: Aligica’s public entrepreneurship, citizenship and self-governance
by Gerald Gaus - 401-408 Remarks on Paul Dragos Aligica’s Public entrepreneurship, citizenship and self-governance
by James Johnson - 409-413 What can we learn about theories of self-governance by studying its most extreme cases?
by Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili - 415-417 John E. King, the Alternative Austrian Economics: A Brief History. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2019. ixv + 222 Pages. USD 120 (Cloth)
by Paul Dragos Aligica - 419-423 Richard M. Salsman, The Political Economy of Public Debt: Three Centuries of Theory and Evidence. Cheltenham, UK, Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2017. Viii + 322 pages. USD 140.00 (hardcover)
by Giuseppe Eusepi - 425-429 Stephen Davies, the Wealth Explosion: The Nature and Origins of Modernity. Brighton: Edward Everett Root, 2019. ixv + 248 Pages. GBP 65.00 (Cloth)
by M. Scott King
June 2021, Volume 34, Issue 2
- 179-201 Progress by consent: Adam Smith as development economist
by William Easterly - 203-220 Hayek on complexity, uncertainty and pandemic response
by Mark Pennington - 221-252 William Beveridge’s “mock trial of economists”
by David M. Levy & Sandra J. Peart - 253-277 Amimetic assets and persistent profits under competition
by Robert Gmeiner - 279-288 Microfoundations and macroeconomics: 20 years
by Nicolás Cachanosky - 289-297 Two paths forward for Austrian macroeconomics
by William J. Luther - 299-309 Speculative holding of goods and the macroeconomic implications of interventions into the pricing process
by G. P. Manish - 311-322 Forced savings and political malinvestment: an application of steve horwitz’s microfoundations and macroeconomics
by Bryan P. Cutsinger - 323-330 Microfoundations and macroeconomics at 20: some reflections
by Steven Horwitz - 331-335 Daniel Aldrich, Black wave how networks and governance shaped Japan’s 3/11 disasters. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2019. xviii + 264 pages. USD 27.50 (paperback)
by Laura Grube - 337-340 Ben Lindbergh and Travis Sawchik, The MVP Machine: How Baseball’s New Nonconformists Are Using Data to Build Better Players
by Ryan H. Murphy
March 2021, Volume 34, Issue 1
- 1-12 Entrepreneurship, novel combinations, capital regrouping, and the structure-agency relationship: an introduction to the special issue on innovation and Austrian economics
by Paul Lewis - 13-32 Plug-and-play, mix-and-match: a capital systems theory of digital technology platforms
by Lynne Kiesling - 33-53 Entrepreneurship prompts institutional change in developing economies
by Niklas Elert & Magnus Henrekson - 55-80 Entrepreneurial aesthetics
by David A. Harper - 81-95 Bureaucrats or Markets in Innovation Policy? – a critique of the entrepreneurial state
by Nils Karlson & Christian Sandström & Karl Wennberg - 97-114 The innovation systems approach: an Austrian and Ostromian perspective
by Paul Lewis - 115-127 Beyond clusters: Crafting contexts for innovation
by Sujai Shivakumar - 129-147 Social innovation and Austrian economics: Exploring the gains from intellectual trade
by Mikayla Novak - 149-162 Blockchain and investment: An Austrian approach
by Darcy W E Allen & Chris Berg & Sinclair Davidson & Jason Potts - 163-166 Francesca Gagliardi and David Gindis (Eds.), Institutions and Evolution of Capitalism: Essays in Honour of Geoffrey M. Hodgson
by Alain Marciano - 167-171 Jason Brennan and Phillip Magness, Cracks in the Ivory Tower: The Moral Mess of Higher Education
by Alexander W. Salter - 173-177 John Quiggin, Economics in two lessons: Why markets work so well, and why they can fail so badly
by Patrick Newman
December 2020, Volume 33, Issue 4
- 407-413 Are we Austrian economists?
by Claudia R. Williamson - 415-431 Austrian themes and the Cambridge capital theory controversies
by J. Barkley Rosser - 433-463 Debating liberalism: Walter Eucken, F. A. Hayek and the early history of the Mont Pèlerin Society
by Stefan Kolev & Nils Goldschmidt & Jan-Otmar Hesse - 465-479 Think-tanks, policy formation, and the ‘revival’ of classical liberal economics
by Steve Davies - 481-501 Strategic marketing & Austrian economics: The foundations of resource-advantage theory
by Fernando Antonio Monteiro Christoph D’Andrea - 503-511 Alchian on Keynes
by Edward W. Fuller - 513-520 On the Scottish distinctiveness from late scholasticism to the Scottish enlightenment a preliminary perspective
by Giovanni PATRIARCA - 521-533 Besieged by the left and the right: The order of liberal globalism
by Stefan Kolev - 535-554 The Geneva connection, a liberal world order, and the Austrian economists
by Richard M. Ebeling
September 2020, Volume 33, Issue 3
- 289-314 The Lighthouse Debate and the Dynamics of Interventionism
by Rosolino A. Candela & Vincent J. Geloso - 315-329 Economic coordination in environments with incomplete pricing
by Paul Dragos Aligica & Richard E. Wagner - 331-348 Economic calculation and the organization of markets
by Ennio E. Piano & Louis Rouanet - 349-361 The crucial role of financial intermediaries for facilitating trade among strangers
by Edward Peter Stringham & J. R. Clark - 363-374 Cryptodemocracy and its institutional possibilities
by Darcy W. E. Allen & Chris Berg & Aaron M. Lane & Jason Potts - 375-382 The microfoundations of the microfoundations of Austrian Business Cycle Theory
by Peter Lewin - 383-395 Capital as in capitalism, or capital as in capital goods, or both?
by Eduard Braun - 397-401 Robert L. Bradley, Jr., Enron ascending: The forgotten years, 1984–1996. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, 2018. xix + 786 pages. USD 95.00 (hardcover)
by Jack High - 403-406 Saifedean Ammous, The Bitcoin Standard: The Decentralized Alternative to Central Banking Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, 2018. xxviii + 304 pages. USD 29.95 (hardcover)
by Jamil Civitarese
March 2020, Volume 33, Issue 1
- 1-1 Wirth symposium: The Austrian School of Economics and the migration of tradition
by Peter J. Boettke - 3-31 Karl Menger’s modernist journey: art, mathematics and mysticism, 1920–1955
by Robert Leonard - 33-54 The legacy of Max Weber and the early Austrians
by Stefan Kolev - 55-68 On emancipators, engineers, and students: The appropriate attitude of the economist
by Erwin Dekker - 69-85 The Austrian School of Economics: A view from London
by Peter J. Boettke & Rosolino A. Candela - 87-106 Methodological confusions and the science wars in economics
by Jayme Lemke & John Kroencke - 107-120 Science lost, science found in the post WWII Austrian economics movement: The case of Emil Kauder
by Janek Wasserman - 121-137 Mises and his money
by Simon Bilo - 139-161 Property rights, entrepreneurship, and economic development
by Audrey Redford - 163-186 Understanding post-communist transitions: the relevance of Austrian economics
by Vlad Tarko - 187-200 The super-alertness of central banks
by Nicolás Cachanosky & Alexander W. Salter - 201-217 Demonetization in India: Superfluous discovery and money laundering
by Shruti Rajagopalan - 219-235 Anthropological archaeology and the Viennese students of civilization
by Crystal A. Dozier - 237-252 The future of political philosophy: Non-ideal and west of babel
by Brian Kogelmann - 253-270 Consent, democracy and the future of liberalism
by Elizabeth Hemsley - 271-276 On fallibility and perfection: Boettke’s Hayek vs. mainline economics
by Sandra J. Peart - 277-287 A review essay on The European Guilds
by Mark Koyama
December 2019, Volume 32, Issue 4
- 281-293 How Austrians can contribute to constitutional political economy (and why they should)
by Andrew T. Young - 295-320 The collaborative innovation bloc: A new mission for Austrian economics
by Niklas Elert & Magnus Henrekson - 321-330 The entrepreneurship scholar plays with blocs: Collaborative innovation or collaborative judgment?
by Nicolai J. Foss & Peter G. Klein & Matthew McCaffrey - 331-338 The political economy of the collaborative innovation bloc
by David S. Lucas - 339-347 Where is the Austrian theory of collaborative orders? Comment on Elert and Henrekson
by Per L. Bylund - 349-361 The collaborative innovation bloc: A reply to our commentators
by Niklas Elert & Magnus Henrekson - 363-374 A note on re-switching, the average period of production and the Austrian business-cycle theory
by Saverio M. Fratini - 375-382 Re-switching, the average period of production and the Austrian business-cycle theory: A comment on Fratini
by Peter Lewin & Nicolas Cachanosky - 383-389 Re-switching and the Austrian business-cycle theory: A rejoinder
by Saverio M. Fratini
September 2019, Volume 32, Issue 3
- 189-189 Symposium on Ludwig Von Mises: Nation State and Economy
by Peter J. Boettke - 191-204 Liberalism, nationalism, and self-determination: Ludwig von Mises’s Nation, State, Economy after 100 years
by Richard M. Ebeling - 205-213 Solving the Misesian migration conundrum
by Benjamin Powell - 215-228 Ludwig von Mises on war and the economy
by Christopher J. Coyne & Anne R. Bradley - 229-249 Understanding nonprofit social enterprises: Lessons from Austrian economics
by Stefanie Haeffele & Virgil Henry Storr - 251-268 The political economy of legal titling
by Ilia Murtazashvili & Jennifer Murtazashvili - 269-275 Karl Sigmund, Exact Thinking in Demented Times: The Vienna Circle and the Epic Quest for the Foundations of Science
by Erwin Dekker - 277-280 Garett Jones, Hive Mind: How Your Nation’s IQ Matters So Much More Than Your Own
by Zachary Gochenour
June 2019, Volume 32, Issue 2
- 89-99 The ethics of pure entrepreneurship: An Austrian economics perspective
by Israel M. Kirzner - 101-105 Entrepreneurial inspiration
by Israel M. Kirzner - 107-117 Economic policy of a free society
by Peter Boettke - 119-130 The ‘minimal’ state reconsidered: governance on the margin
by J. R. Clark & Benjamin Powell - 131-137 Taxation in the Liberal Tradition
by Robert A. Lawson & J. R. Clark - 139-158 The nudge wars: A modern socialist calculation debate
by Abigail N. Devereaux - 159-179 Governance of shale gas development: Insights from the Bloomington school of institutional analysis
by Ilia Murtazashvili & Ennio E. Piano - 181-184 Dennis C. Rasmussen, The Infidel and the Professor: David Hume, Adam Smith, and the Friendship That Shaped Modern Thought
by Erik W. Matson - 185-188 Giuseppe Eusepi, Richard E. Wagner: Public debt: An illusion of democratic political economy
by Daniel J. Smith
March 2019, Volume 32, Issue 1
- 1-20 James M. Buchanan’s 1981 visit to Chile: Knightian democrat or defender of the ‘Devil’s fix’?
by Andrew Farrant & Vlad Tarko - 21-46 Buchanan and public finance: The tennessee years
by Alain Marciano - 47-61 Lachmann practiced humanomics, beyond the dogma of behaviorism
by Deirdre Nansen McCloskey - 63-75 Ludwig Lachmann’s peculiar status within Austrian economics
by Virgil Henry Storr - 77-79 Erwin Dekker, The Viennese Students of Civilization: The Meaning and Context of Austrian Economics Reconsidered. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2016. xii + 236 pages. $110.00 (hardback)
by Peter Lewin