Cambridge as a geographical reference often crops up in the characterisation of the economic theories and approaches that developed in Cambridge (UK) between the 1920s and the 1960s with the contribution of economists who did not always share the same interests, background or attitudes, but who all lived and worked – for considerable periods of time – in that particular corner of the world
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D53389/85 / BLDSC - British Library Docume...
International audienceThis chapter assesses Oxford’s contributions to the emergence and institutiona...
This feature addresses the history of economic words and ideas. The hope is to deepen the workaday d...
Cambridge as a geographical reference often crops up in the characterisation of the economic theorie...
In a letter to John Neville Keynes, in an attempt to persuade him to decline the offer of a chair in...
Even though references to the “Cambridge School” are frequent in history of economic thought literat...
“Cambridge capital controversy”, “Cambridge monetary theory of business cycle”, “Cambridge equation”...
In this paper we present the main results of an investigation into the correspondence exchanged amon...
This article explores the emergence of the Cambridge Journal of Economics, highlighting its strength...
In the lifetime of the Journal of Economic Geography geographers and economists have followed diverg...
The workshop on ‘Cambridge and the Anglo-Italian Economic Tradition’ has been organized within the ...
1 Browsing through Oxford students ’ economics reading lists during the inter-war period; it rapidly...
This chapter explores explicit contributions to economic methodology originating in Cambridge. These...
The spatial aspects of economic theory have been developed through time in spatial price theory and ...
This paper draws attention to academic travel as a key issue in the geographies of knowledge, scienc...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D53389/85 / BLDSC - British Library Docume...
International audienceThis chapter assesses Oxford’s contributions to the emergence and institutiona...
This feature addresses the history of economic words and ideas. The hope is to deepen the workaday d...
Cambridge as a geographical reference often crops up in the characterisation of the economic theorie...
In a letter to John Neville Keynes, in an attempt to persuade him to decline the offer of a chair in...
Even though references to the “Cambridge School” are frequent in history of economic thought literat...
“Cambridge capital controversy”, “Cambridge monetary theory of business cycle”, “Cambridge equation”...
In this paper we present the main results of an investigation into the correspondence exchanged amon...
This article explores the emergence of the Cambridge Journal of Economics, highlighting its strength...
In the lifetime of the Journal of Economic Geography geographers and economists have followed diverg...
The workshop on ‘Cambridge and the Anglo-Italian Economic Tradition’ has been organized within the ...
1 Browsing through Oxford students ’ economics reading lists during the inter-war period; it rapidly...
This chapter explores explicit contributions to economic methodology originating in Cambridge. These...
The spatial aspects of economic theory have been developed through time in spatial price theory and ...
This paper draws attention to academic travel as a key issue in the geographies of knowledge, scienc...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D53389/85 / BLDSC - British Library Docume...
International audienceThis chapter assesses Oxford’s contributions to the emergence and institutiona...
This feature addresses the history of economic words and ideas. The hope is to deepen the workaday d...