In 4 parts and 13 chapters, this book explores the invention of economics as a university discipline in the UK (with some comparative discussion of other countries when relevant). Tribe makes several points, but at core, he suggests there is a dangerous Whig history tendency to read the development of economics backwards from its current state. He argues that the development of economics as a subject in the UK depended on various contextual factors in the 19th and early 20th century. These included (and this list is not exhaustive): industrialisation and urbanisation, which provided a basis for public education initiatives (grassroots organisation and philanthropic work and funding, leading to study groups, public lectures, night schools et...
this review, which focuses on The Cambridge School of Economics, so very different from the mainstre...
Daniela Tavasci and Luigi Ventimiglia, two scholars from the School of Economics and Finance at Quee...
Political scientists have been far less articulate and influential than economists in. this depressi...
One of the most important texts to be published in 2003 that is of relevance to the sub-discipline o...
With the financial crisis continuing after five years, many question why economics failed either to ...
The books noticed here, at different levels of communication, all attempt to state conditions of our...
economics, it was really not until after the second world war that economics became the distinctive,...
Entrepreneurs, Institutions, and Economic Change: The Economic Thought of J. A. Schumpeter (l905-192...
In the 1960s and 1970s, economic history was transformed by the application of economic theory and e...
In Constructing Economic Science: The Invention of a Discipline 1850-1950 Keith Tribe takes us on a ...
There is no settled view among economists about the place of their discipline in the general archite...
Rethinking Economics and the New Weather Institute Thirty Three Theses for an Economics Reformatio...
History of Economic Thought as an Intellectual Discipline D. P. OBrien Cheltenham, United Kingdom: E...
The Rise and Fall of the Atlantic Economic Community: Brinley Thomas' (1906-1994) contention that "i...
A Farewell to Alms advances striking claims about the economic history of the world. These include (...
this review, which focuses on The Cambridge School of Economics, so very different from the mainstre...
Daniela Tavasci and Luigi Ventimiglia, two scholars from the School of Economics and Finance at Quee...
Political scientists have been far less articulate and influential than economists in. this depressi...
One of the most important texts to be published in 2003 that is of relevance to the sub-discipline o...
With the financial crisis continuing after five years, many question why economics failed either to ...
The books noticed here, at different levels of communication, all attempt to state conditions of our...
economics, it was really not until after the second world war that economics became the distinctive,...
Entrepreneurs, Institutions, and Economic Change: The Economic Thought of J. A. Schumpeter (l905-192...
In the 1960s and 1970s, economic history was transformed by the application of economic theory and e...
In Constructing Economic Science: The Invention of a Discipline 1850-1950 Keith Tribe takes us on a ...
There is no settled view among economists about the place of their discipline in the general archite...
Rethinking Economics and the New Weather Institute Thirty Three Theses for an Economics Reformatio...
History of Economic Thought as an Intellectual Discipline D. P. OBrien Cheltenham, United Kingdom: E...
The Rise and Fall of the Atlantic Economic Community: Brinley Thomas' (1906-1994) contention that "i...
A Farewell to Alms advances striking claims about the economic history of the world. These include (...
this review, which focuses on The Cambridge School of Economics, so very different from the mainstre...
Daniela Tavasci and Luigi Ventimiglia, two scholars from the School of Economics and Finance at Quee...
Political scientists have been far less articulate and influential than economists in. this depressi...