The paper is a contribution to a series of recollections and reflections on the professional experiences of distinguished economists which the Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Quarterly Review started in 1979. Jack Revell’s entry to the world of economics started when he was accepted at the London School of Economics in 1945. This was followed by training at the Department of Applied Economics in the University of Cambridge, the University College of North Wales in Bangor and the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development in France
There cannot be many economists whose very first published work achieved the fame and influence of F...
The Department of Economics (which merged with Finance about a decade ago) marks its centenary this ...
Dr. Tyler Goodspeed is the Kleinheinz Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. From ...
The paper is the first inaugural contribution to the new series of "Recollections of Eminent Economi...
The short editorial introduces the new issue and volume of the Review. In this issue, the PSL Quarte...
Contribution to a series of recollections and reflections on professional experiences of distinguish...
It has been 25 years since Lord John Vaizey, the English economist and educationist passed away in J...
The paper is concerned with the decade and a half spent by the development economist, Arthur Lewis, ...
John Vaizey is almost a forgotten figure in modern British history and even more in the fields of po...
Executive Board intends to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of a Czech profess...
I studied economics and made it my career for two reasons. The subject was and is intellectually fas...
Lives of the Laureates offers readers an informal history of modern economic thought as told through...
In this article the late Kurt Rothschild comments on Joseph Steindl’s first paper on economic topics...
Cambridge as a geographical reference often crops up in the characterisation of the economic theorie...
Thank you to Queen Mary College and especially Jonathan Haskel for inviting me to give this lecture....
There cannot be many economists whose very first published work achieved the fame and influence of F...
The Department of Economics (which merged with Finance about a decade ago) marks its centenary this ...
Dr. Tyler Goodspeed is the Kleinheinz Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. From ...
The paper is the first inaugural contribution to the new series of "Recollections of Eminent Economi...
The short editorial introduces the new issue and volume of the Review. In this issue, the PSL Quarte...
Contribution to a series of recollections and reflections on professional experiences of distinguish...
It has been 25 years since Lord John Vaizey, the English economist and educationist passed away in J...
The paper is concerned with the decade and a half spent by the development economist, Arthur Lewis, ...
John Vaizey is almost a forgotten figure in modern British history and even more in the fields of po...
Executive Board intends to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of a Czech profess...
I studied economics and made it my career for two reasons. The subject was and is intellectually fas...
Lives of the Laureates offers readers an informal history of modern economic thought as told through...
In this article the late Kurt Rothschild comments on Joseph Steindl’s first paper on economic topics...
Cambridge as a geographical reference often crops up in the characterisation of the economic theorie...
Thank you to Queen Mary College and especially Jonathan Haskel for inviting me to give this lecture....
There cannot be many economists whose very first published work achieved the fame and influence of F...
The Department of Economics (which merged with Finance about a decade ago) marks its centenary this ...
Dr. Tyler Goodspeed is the Kleinheinz Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. From ...