Content
April 2022, Volume 29, Issue 2
- 111-112 Introduction to the INEM 2019 special issue
by Luis Mireles-Flores & Magdalena Małecka & Caterina Marchionni - 113-123 Darwinian rational expectations
by Kobi Finestone - 124-139 Three accounts of intrinsic motivation in economics: a pragmatic choice?
by Blaž Remic - 140-152 What’s (successful) extrapolation?
by Donal Khosrowi - 153-165 What preferences for behavioral welfare economics?
by Till Grüne-Yanoff - 166-177 Unifying Theories of institutions: a critique of Pettit’s Virtual Control Theory
by Frank Hindriks - 178-180 Review of an advanced introduction to feminist economics
by Julie A. Nelson
January 2022, Volume 29, Issue 1
- 1-3 Introduction: Lucas’s enduring impact on macroeconomic thinking
by Peter Galbács - 4-16 Lucas’s way to his monetary theory of large-scale fluctuations
by Peter Galbács - 17-29 Learning from Lucas
by Thomas J. Sargent - 30-47 Lucas’s methodological divide in inflation theory: a student’s journey
by Max Gillman - 48-65 The lasting influence of Robert E. Lucas on Chicago economics
by Harald Uhlig - 66-85 Lucas’ expectational equilibrium, price rigidity, and descriptive realism
by Mauro Boianovsky - 86-104 Dispersed information and the non-neutrality of money: fifty years after Lucas, 1972
by Pierrick Clerc & Rodolphe Dos Santos Ferreira - 105-109 A review on Katzner’s Models, mathematics and methodology in economic explanation, Cambridge University Press 2018
by Aki Lehtinen
October 2021, Volume 28, Issue 4
- 349-349 Introduction to the Review Symposium on Robert Sugden's The Community of Advantage
by Jack Vromen & N. Emrah Aydinonat - 350-363 On the possibility of an anti-paternalist behavioural welfare economics
by Johanna Thoma - 364-373 The limits of opportunity-only: context-dependence and agency in behavioral welfare economics
by Malte F. Dold & Mario J. Rizzo - 374-384 Sugden’s community of advantage
by Geoffrey Brennan & Hartmut Kliemt - 385-400 In defense of behavioral welfare economics
by B. Douglas Bernheim - 401-408 Voluntary agreements
by Cass R. Sunstein - 409-418 Reconciling the liberal tradition in normative economics with the findings of behavioural economics: on J.S. Mill, libertarian paternalism and Robert Sugden’s The Community of Advantage
by Mozaffar Qizilbash - 419-430 A response to six comments on The Community of Advantage
by Robert Sugden - 431-435 Escaping paternalism: rationality, behavioral economics, and public policy
by Philip Arthur
July 2021, Volume 28, Issue 3
- 255-273 Building comparison spaces: Harold Hotelling and mathematics for economics
by Marion Gaspard & Thomas M. Mueller - 274-290 A qualitative study of perception of a dishonesty experiment
by Nikola Frollová & Marek Vranka & Petr Houdek - 291-303 Model diversity and the embarrassment of riches
by Walter Veit - 304-321 Determinism, free will, and the Austrian School of Economics
by Dawid Megger - 322-335 When does complementarity support pluralism about schools of economic thought?
by Teemu Lari - 336-339 The great economist David Hume
by Robert Sugden - 340-347 Economic methodology for policy guidance
by Don Ross
April 2021, Volume 28, Issue 2
- 143-164 Savage’s response to Allais as Broomean reasoning
by Franz Dietrich & Antonios Staras & Robert Sugden - 165-185 Models as ‘analytical similes’: on Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen's contribution to economic methodology
by Quentin Couix - 186-206 Multiple models, one explanation
by Chiara Lisciandra & Johannes Korbmacher - 207-230 Abstraction and closure: a methodological discussion of distribution-led growth
by Michalis Nikiforos - 231-246 The institutional preconditions of homo economicus
by Eduard Braun - 247-249 To incriminate, to apologize or to excuse? Finance and the uncertainty conundrum
by Daniel Seabra Lopes - 250-253 A con artist or the father of revolutionary ideas? James Forder’s recent book on Milton Friedman
by Peter Galbács
January 2021, Volume 28, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction: economic methodology and philosophy of economics twenty years since the Millennium
by John Davis & D. Wade Hands - 3-13 The field: tasks, pasts, futures
by Uskali Mäki - 14-22 Philosophy of economics: past and future
by Daniel M. Hausman - 23-31 What are we up to?
by Jack Vromen - 32-39 Economic methodology in 2020: looking forward, looking back
by Don Ross - 40-45 On letting serious crises go to waste
by Francesco Guala - 46-53 Economic methodology, the philosophy of economics and the economy: another turn?
by Sheila Dow - 54-59 Back to the big picture
by Anna Alexandrova & Robert Northcott & Jack Wright - 60-66 Retreat from normativism
by Marcel Boumans - 67-78 Economic methodology: a bibliometric perspective
by Alexandre Truc & François Claveau & Olivier Santerre - 79-87 The Helsinki approach to economic methodology, or, how to espouse the mainstream?
by Aki Lehtinen - 88-97 Values in economics: a recent revival with a twist
by Magdalena Małecka - 98-106 On the recent philosophy of decision theory
by Ivan Moscati - 107-113 Economics and community knowledge-making
by Julie A. Nelson - 114-123 How-possibly explanations in economics: anything goes?
by Till Grüne-Yanoff & Philippe Verreault-Julien - 124-133 Theories of well-being and well-being policy: a view from methodology
by Roberto Fumagalli - 134-142 Co-production and economics: insights from the constructive use of experimental games in adaptive resource management
by Michiru Nagatsu
October 2020, Volume 27, Issue 4
- 275-291 Neuroeconomics beyond the brain: some externalist notions of choice
by Enrico Petracca - 292-310 Functionalism and the role of psychology in economics
by Christopher Clarke - 311-329 Pluralism in economics: its critiques and their lessons
by Claudius Gräbner & Birte Strunk - 330-350 Power as an epistemological obstacle: Walter Eucken’s quest for an interest-proof economic science
by Raphaël Fèvre
July 2020, Volume 27, Issue 3
- 191-211 Holding back from theory: limits and methodological alternatives of randomized field experiments in development economics
by Judith Favereau & Michiru Nagatsu - 212-225 When Econs are human
by John R. Welch - 226-239 Collectively accepted social norms and performativity: the pursuit of normativity of globalization in economic institutions
by Noriaki Okamoto - 240-262 Emergence versus neoclassical reductions in economics
by George Chorafakis - 263-265 Response to ‘Response to Henschen: causal pluralism in macroeconomics’
by Tobias Henschen - 266-268 A rejoinder to Henschen: the issue of VAR and DSGE models
by Mariusz Maziarz & Robert Mróz - 269-273 Technology, society, and performativity: on a new book by Nicolas Brisset
by Ivan Boldyrev
April 2020, Volume 27, Issue 2
- 97-116 When efficient market hypothesis meets Hayek on information: beyond a methodological reading
by Nathanaël Colin-Jaeger & Thomas Delcey - 117-129 Built-in normativity in tailoring identity: the case of the EU skills profile tool for integrating refugees
by Merve Burnazoglu - 130-145 The model (also) in the world: extending the sociological theory of fields to economic models
by Nicolas Brisset & Dorian Jullien - 146-163 Games of strategy in culture and economics research
by Maxwell Mkondiwa - 164-178 Response to Henschen: causal pluralism in macroeconomics
by Mariusz Maziarz & Robert Mróz - 179-184 Rethinking what every economics student needs to know
by Merve Burnazoglu & Francis Ostermeijer - 184-189 Self-Control, Decision Theory, and Rationality – New Essays
by James D. Grayot
January 2020, Volume 27, Issue 1
- 1-17 Experimenting with the Coase theorem
by Ramzi Mabsout & Hossein Radmard - 18-35 Beyond ‘having reason to value’: why we should adopt a procedure-independent and value-neutral definition of capabilities
by Morten Fibieger Byskov - 36-50 The normative decision theory in economics: a philosophy of science perspective. The case of the expected utility theory
by Magdalena Małecka - 51-65 Restoring constitution: saving performativity from Mäki’s critique
by Mickey Peled - 66-88 Epistemic and non-epistemic values in economic evaluations of public health
by Alessandra Cenci & M. Azhar Hussain - 89-92 Ladders of abstraction, support factors, and semantics in the design of policies
by Menno Rol - 93-96 Abstract principles, causal cakes and asymmetry of results in policy making. A reply to Menno Rol
by Leonardo Ivarola
October 2019, Volume 26, Issue 4
- 1-1 Correction
by The Editors - 291-306 Two types of ecological rationality: or how to best combine psychology and economics
by Erwin Dekker & Blaž Remic - 307-326 The historical roots (1880–1950) of recent contributions (2000–2017) to ecological economics: insights from reference publication year spectroscopy
by Matthieu Ballandonne - 327-346 Structural dualism, socio-evolutionary reproduction and the transformation of orthodoxy and heterodoxy in economics
by Theodore T. Koutsobinas - 347-360 The fragility of results and bias in empirical research: an exploratory exposition
by Imad A. Moosa - 361-379 Maurice Allais on the quantity theory of money: the ontological restatement
by Ramzi Klabi - 380-384 Measuring utility: from the marginal revolution to behavioral economics
by Lukas Beck & Anna Alexandrova - 385-388 A critique of the history of economic ideas
by Marcel Boumans - 389-392 Measuring utility: from the marginal revolution to behavioral economics
by Itzhak Gilboa - 393-400 Measuring Utility without ‘externalist fallacies’: a response to Alexandrova and Beck, Boumans, and Gilboa
by Ivan Moscati
July 2019, Volume 26, Issue 3
- 177-178 Introduction to symposium
by Magdalena Małecka & Michiru Nagatsu - 179-194 Four Methodenstreits between behavioral and mainstream economics
by Vladimir Avtonomov & Yuri Avtonomov - 195-207 We're all behavioral economists now
by Erik Angner - 208-227 From selves to systems: on the intrapersonal and intraneural dynamics of decision making
by James Grayot - 228-242 Mechanism in behavioural economics
by Michael Joffe - 243-258 Bounded sociality: behavioural economists’ truncated understanding of the social and its implications for politics
by Sabine Frerichs - 259-271 Behavioral economics, gender economics, and feminist economics: friends or foes?
by Giandomenica Becchio - 272-289 Behavioral policies and inequities: the case of incentivized smoking cessation policies
by O. Çağlar Dede
April 2019, Volume 26, Issue 2
- 81-98 Let’s take the bias out of econometrics
by Duo Qin - 99-117 What’s feminist about feminist economics?
by Sheba Tejani - 118-132 Beyond dualities in behavioural economics: what can G. H. Mead’s conceptions of self and reflexivity contribute to the current debate?
by Carsten Herrmann-Pillath - 133-146 How behavioural economics relates to psychology – some bibliographic evidence
by Fabian Braesemann - 147-162 Alternative consequences and asymmetry of results: their importance for policy decision making
by Leonardo Ivarola - 163-167 A rich vein for historians and methodologists of recent economics to mine
by Kyu Sang Lee - 167-171 Miscalculating happiness: review of Frey’s economics of happiness
by Adam Tamas Tuboly - 171-175 Cambridge Economics: a place, a people, an academic community and its Palgrave Companion
by Constantinos Repapis
January 2019, Volume 26, Issue 1
- 1-1 Introduction to special issue on INEM 2017
by Julian Reiss - 2-12 , AIs, humans and rats: decision-making and economic welfare
by Diane Coyle - 13-31 Prospect theory in the wild: how good is the nonexperimental evidence for prospect theory?
by Andre Hofmeyr & Harold Kincaid - 32-44 A methodological framework to address gaps in the evidence on infrastructure impacts: the case of an Indian railway project evaluation
by Sreeja Jaiswal & Gunther Bensch - 45-58 Extrapolation of causal effects – hopes, assumptions, and the extrapolator’s circle
by Donal Khosrowi - 59-69 Prediction versus accommodation in economics
by Robert Northcott - 70-80 The Smithian ontology of ‘relative poverty’: revisiting the debate between Amartya Sen and Peter Townsend
by Toru Yamamori
October 2018, Volume 25, Issue 4
- 283-290 A quantitative turn in the historiography of economics?
by José Edwards & Yann Giraud & Christophe Schinckus - 291-310 A comparison between qualitative and quantitative histories: the example of the efficient market hypothesis
by Franck Jovanovic - 311-328 Five reasons for the use of network analysis in the history of economics
by Herfeld Catherine & Malte Doehne - 329-348 What topic modeling could reveal about the evolution of economics
by Angela Ambrosino & Mario Cedrini & John B. Davis & Stefano Fiori & Marco Guerzoni & Massimiliano Nuccio - 349-366 Quantifying central banks’ scientization: why and how to do a quantified organizational history of economics
by François Claveau & Jérémie Dion - 367-377 The quantitative turn in the history of economics: promises, perils and challenges
by Beatrice Cherrier & Andrej Svorenčík
July 2018, Volume 25, Issue 3
- 211-217 Philosophy of Economics Rules: introduction to the symposium
by N. Emrah Aydinonat - 218-236 Rights and wrongs of economic modelling: refining Rodrik
by Uskali Mäki - 237-251 The diversity of models as a means to better explanations in economics
by N. Emrah Aydinonat - 252-264 Model selection in macroeconomics: DSGE and ad hocness
by Jaakko Kuorikoski & Aki Lehtinen - 265-275 Modeling model selection in model pluralism
by Till Grüne-Yanoff & Caterina Marchionni - 276-281 Second thoughts on economics rules
by Dani Rodrik
April 2018, Volume 25, Issue 2
- 117-125 Was the deflation of the depression anticipated? An inference using real-time data
by Gabriel Mathy & Herman Stekler - 126-142 Can welfare be measured with a preference-satisfaction index?
by Willem van der Deijl - 143-159 Samuelson’s operationally meaningful theorems: reflections of E. B. Wilson’s methodological attitude
by Juan Carvajalino - 160-178 Back to Buchanan? Explorations of welfare and subjectivism in behavioral economics
by Malte F. Dold - 179-209 Explaining patterns, not details: reevaluating rational choice models in light of their explananda
by Catherine Herfeld
January 2018, Volume 25, Issue 1
- 1-20 What is macroeconomic causality?
by Tobias Henschen - 21-41 Models as speech acts: the telling case of financial models
by Nicolas Brisset - 42-67 Varieties of paternalism and the heterogeneity of utility structures
by Glenn W. Harrison & Don Ross - 68-82 Historical models and economic syllogisms
by Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira - 83-104 Is ‘new’ behavioral economics ‘mainstream’?
by Alexandre Truc - 105-111 A Peircean Perspective on Integrating Economics and Evolutionary Theory
by James R. Wible - 111-116 Understanding and Defining Institutions: The Contribution of Francesco Gual
by Geoffrey M. Hodgson
October 2017, Volume 24, Issue 4
- 359-360 Symposium on big data: introduction
by John B. Davis & Wade Hands - 362-383 Agent-based modelling as a foundation for big data
by Shu-Heng Chen & Ragupathy Venkatachalam - 384-409 Modeling economic systems as locally-constructive sequential games
by Leigh Tesfatsion - 410-429 Big data and complexity: Is macroeconomics heading toward a new paradigm?
by Paola D’Orazio - 430-434 Living by default
by Christophe Salvat - 434-440 Performativity: moving economics further?
by Anja Breljak & Felix Kersting
July 2017, Volume 24, Issue 3
- 213-225 The Reinhart-Rogoff controversy as an instance of the ‘emerging contrary result’ phenomenon
by Mariusz Maziarz - 226-249 What is extreme about Mises’s extreme apriorism?
by Scott Scheall - 251-253 Foreword: the Third International Conference of Economic Philosophy
by Gilles Campagnolo - 254-273 A new definition of and role for preferences in positive economics
by Bart Engelen - 274-296 Narrativity and identity in the representation of the economic agent
by Tom Juille & Dorian Jullien - 297-317 Non-causal understanding with economic models: the case of general equilibrium
by Philippe Verreault-Julien - 318-343 Mindreading and endogenous beliefs in games
by Lauren Larrouy & Guilhem Lecouteux - 344-348 Science outside the laboratory: measurement in field science and economics
by Henrik Roeland Visser - 349-355 The public vs. private value of health, and their relationship
by S. Andrew Schroeder - 356-357 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
April 2017, Volume 24, Issue 2
- 117-118 Introduction to special issue on INEM 2015
by Don Ross - 119-133 Enriching economics in South Africa: interdisciplinary collaboration and the value of quantitative – qualitative exchanges
by Dorrit Posel - 134-149 Fact-value entanglement in positive economics
by Julian Reiss - 150-165 The empirical adequacy of cumulative prospect theory and its implications for normative assessment
by Glenn W. Harrison & Don Ross - 166-189 Hyperbolic delay discounting integrates five approaches to impulsive choice
by George Ainslie - 190-203 Does studying ethics affect moral views? An application to economic justice
by James Konow - 204-210 Of consequentialism, its critics, and the critics of its critics
by Ravi Kanbur - 211-212 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
January 2017, Volume 24, Issue 1
- 1-19 Sen is not a capability theorist
by Antoinette Baujard & Muriel Gilardone - 20-40 A cognition paradigm clash: Simon, situated cognition and the interpretation of bounded rationality
by Enrico Petracca - 41-68 The critical realist conception of open and closed systems
by Steve Fleetwood - 69-89 Critical reflections on a realist interpretation of Friedman’s ‘Methodology of Positive Economics’
by Edward Mariyani-Squire - 90-103 Positive public economics: reinterpreting ‘optimal’ policies
by Brian C. Albrecht - 104-108 Between a compendium and a hard place
by Tiago Mata - 108-114 Experimental methodology on the move
by Francesco Guala - 115-116 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
October 2016, Volume 23, Issue 4
- () Editorial Board
by The Editors - 349-373 Sen’s criticism of revealed preference theory and its ‘neo-samuelsonian critique’: a methodological and theoretical assessment
by Cyril Hédoin - 374-395 Constitutive explanations in neuroeconomics: principles and a case study on money
by Carsten Herrmann-Pillath - 396-412 Space for virtue in the economics of Kenneth J. Arrow, Amartya Sen and Elinor Ostrom
by Dominic Burbidge - 413-431 Financial functional analysis: a conceptual framework for understanding the changing financial system
by John P. Wilson & Larry Campbell - 432-433 Notes on contributors
by John Davis
July 2016, Volume 23, Issue 3
- 237-240 Introduction to symposium on ‘Patrick Suppes, economics, and economic methodology’
by D. Wade Hands - 241-251 Patrick Suppes and game theory
by Ken Binmore - 252-267 Measurement theory and utility analysis in Suppes’ early work, 1951–1958
by Ivan Moscati - 268-288 Choice-based cardinal utility: a tribute to Patrick Suppes
by Jean Baccelli & Philippe Mongin - 289-304 Suppes’ probabilistic theory of causality and causal inference in economics
by Julian Reiss - 305-315 Suppes’s outlines of an empirical measurement theory
by Marcel Boumans - 316-332 Freedom and choice in economics
by Adolfo García de la Sienra - 333-346 The world in axioms: an interview with Patrick Suppes
by Catherine Herfeld - 347-348 Notes on contributors
by John Davis
June 2016, Volume 23, Issue 2
- 127-129 Introduction to discussion forum on Glenn W. Harrison’s ‘field experiments and methodological intolerance’
by Don Ross - 130-138 Robert A. Millikan meets the credibility revolution: comment on Harrison (2013), ‘field experiments and methodological intolerance’
by Nathaniel T. Wilcox - 139-146 Methodological ignorance: A comment on field experiments and methodological intolerance
by Marcel Boumans - 147-156 Experiments, policy, and theory in development economics: a response to Glenn Harrison’s ‘field experiments and methodological intolerance’
by Thomas Bossuroy & Clara Delavallade - 157-159 Field experiments and methodological intolerance: reply
by Glenn W. Harrison - 160-184 Economics is not always performative: some limits for performativity
by Nicolas Brisset - 185-202 Beyond welfare economics: some methodological issues
by Giuseppe Munda - 203-222 On the analogy between field experiments in economics and clinical trials in medicine
by Judith Favereau - 223-227 Methodological misconceptions in the social sciences. Rethinking social thought and social processes
by Carsten Herrmann-Pillath - 227-234 Hayek and Popper: on rationality, economism, and democracy
by Bruce Caldwell
March 2016, Volume 23, Issue 1
- 1-25 Preference purification and the inner rational agent: a critique of the conventional wisdom of behavioural welfare economics
by Gerardo Infante & Guilhem Lecouteux & Robert Sugden - 26-32 On the Econ within
by Daniel M. Hausman - 33-37 ‘On the Econ within’: a reply to Daniel Hausman
by Gerardo Infante & Guilhem Lecouteux & Robert Sugden - 38-56 Adjusting the model to adjust the world: constructive mechanisms in postwar general equilibrium theory
by Ivan Boldyrev & Alexey Ushakov - 57-76 Firms, agency, and evolution
by Armin W. Schulz