Archive
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013Technology-Skill Complementarity on the Eve of the Industrial Resolution: New Evidence from England (1710-1772)
This research project focuses on the effect of the technological changes that led to the British Industrial Revolution in the eighteenth century on the market for skilled workers.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics and its Influence on Market Liberal Policy Norms, c. 1968-2000
This research project investigates the influence of economic doctrines on policy norms in recent decades through analysis of the history of the Nobel Prize in Economics.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013Origins of the Graduate Economics Canon in the United States
This research project explores and documents the development of graduate economics training in the leading centers of doctoral education in the United States.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013Competition and Equality in Imperial China
This research project uncovers the economic forces which reshaped the evolution of the imperial examination system in traditional China, using a new dataset from archival sources of ancient Chinese Books.
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Article
Waste, waste, waste
Dec 9, 2012
Economics is very theoretically comfortable with what may be termed `Keynesian’ waste.
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Article
Blending the Economy and Science
Nov 5, 2012
For one more time traveling closer to home – Mainz! It’s been the annual meeting of the German Society of the History of Science (the kind of academic club one has to be nominated for membership).
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Article
To teach or not to teach economics with The Wire?
Nov 1, 2012
So, my new students’ training is essentially about understanding urban “territories” and “societies” through fieldwork. And my contribution is, supposedly, to highlight the economic dimension of all this.
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Article
What should every non-econ student know about economics?
Oct 30, 2012
When they told me I was expected to teach “Introduction à l’économie” this year, I thought, OK, this is straight. Every economist knows how to do that.
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Video
A Conversation on the Economy
Oct 24, 2012
What do you get when you put two of the most well known and most widely cited economists in the world, both Nobel laureates, on stage together? A healthy dose of economic reality.
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Article
The use of economists' biography, IV.
Sep 23, 2012
Excerpts from a draft introduction of Till Düppe’s and Roy Weintraub’s new book, under revision for Princeton University Press, presently carrying the working title “Finding Equilibrium: Arrow, Debreu, McKenzie and the Transformation of Economic Theory
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Article
The use of economists' biography, III.
Sep 19, 2012
“The aim would not be to unravel a hidden coherent structure of the philosophical, theoretical, political dimensions of his work, but to give a sense of the contingencies that his work was subject to – both in terms of its origins and its receptions. Don’t make up an Arrow that he himself was not aware of.” -Till to me, email conversation on Kenneth Arrow, summer 2012
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Article
The use of economists' biography, II.
Sep 17, 2012
Excerpts from “Retrospect and Prospect,” the concluding remarks Bob Coats presented at (or maybe wrote after) the History of Economics conference held in 1972 at Bellagio to commemorate and reassess the 1870s “marginal revolution” (full proceedings here).
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Article
The use of economists' biography, I.
Sep 17, 2012
Robert Solow, “Notes on Coping.” In Szenberg ed. Eminent Economists: their Life Philosophy, 1992, p270
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Article
A Quick One (Message to Naomi)
Sep 13, 2012
Yesterday, I had my first introductory economics seminar with my new students.
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Article
Keynes's 10 Professors... and a Major
Sep 1, 2012
I thought I was on to an inside reference when re-reading the General Theory when Keynes calls Marx, Edgeworth and others simply by name, but refers to “Professor Pigou” in several instances.