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Cambridge Economics in the Post-Keynesian Era: The Eclipse of Heterodox Traditions 2022 ed. [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 1188 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 2450 g, 2 Illustrations, black and white; XXXIX, 1188 p. 2 illus. In 2 volumes, not available separately., 2 hardbacks
  • Serija: Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Nov-2022
  • Leidėjas: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • ISBN-10: 3030930181
  • ISBN-13: 9783030930189
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 1188 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 2450 g, 2 Illustrations, black and white; XXXIX, 1188 p. 2 illus. In 2 volumes, not available separately., 2 hardbacks
  • Serija: Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Nov-2022
  • Leidėjas: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • ISBN-10: 3030930181
  • ISBN-13: 9783030930189
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

This book chronicles the rise and especially the demise of diverse revolutionary heterodox traditions in Cambridge theoretical and applied economics, investigating both the impact of internal pressures within the faculty as also the power of external ideological and political forces unleashed by the global dominance of neoliberalism. Using fresh archival materials, personal interviews and recollections, this meticulously researched narrative constructs the untold story of the eclipse of these heterodox and post-Keynesian intellectual traditions rooted and nurtured in Cambridge since the 1920s, and the rise to power of orthodox, mainstream economics. Also expunged in this neoclassical counter-revolution were the structural and radical policy-oriented macro-economic modelling teams of the iconic Department of Applied Economics,  along with the atrophy of sociology, development and economic history from teaching and research in the self-purifying faculty. This book will be of particular interest to researchers in the history of economic thought, sociology of knowledge, political economy, especially those engaged in heterodox and post-Keynesian economics, and to everyone wishing to make economics fit for purpose again for negotiating the multiple economic, social and environmental crises rampant at national and global levels.


1 Cambridge, That Was: The Crucible of Heterodox Economics
1(68)
1.1 The Narrative
1(3)
1.2 Evolutions and Revolutions
4(10)
1.2.1 The Great Banyan of Heterodox Traditions
4(2)
1.2.2 Cohorts
6(3)
1.2.3 The Cambridge Habitat
9(2)
1.2.4 Which Cambridge?
11(3)
1.3 Regime Change
14(12)
1.3.1 The World of Cambridge: Stories Within
20(2)
1.3.2 Worlds Beyond Cambridge: Neoliberalism at the Gates
22(4)
1.4 The Dialectic of Competing Paradigms
26(30)
1.4.1 Laissez-Faire: "Receding at last into the distance"
27(2)
1.4.2 The Force of Ideas
29(3)
1.4.3 Opposition Brewing
32(1)
1.4.4 Evolutions and Hegemonic Incorporation
33(3)
1.4.5 Ideological: Not the Techniques but the Purposes of Economics
36(2)
1.4.6 Sociological: Mathematical Whiz-Kids and Ageing Dinosaurs
38(1)
1.4.7 Beyond Kuhnian Reductionism
39(1)
1.4.8 Mankiw's Pendulum
40(2)
1.4.9 Solow's A La Carte Approach
42(1)
1.4.10 Silos and Trenches
43(3)
1.4.11 Joan Versus Hahn---History Versus Equilibrium
46(10)
1.5 Semantics and Pedantics
56(13)
References
63(6)
2 The Warring Tribes
69(110)
2.1 A Sanctuary of Sages
70(25)
2.1.1 Class to Community: The Cement of War
70(6)
2.1.2 Community to Conflict: Cement to Sand
76(2)
2.1.3 A Pride of Savage Prima Donnas
78(17)
2.2 Faculty Wars
95(34)
2.2.7 Paradise Lost
102(1)
2.2.2 Fault Lines Within
103(1)
Wynne Godley: No Legacy No Synthesis, No Textbooks---The Samuelson Factor
103(1)
Shifting Student Preferences?
104(2)
"Irrelevance" and Irreverence: Joan and K-Theory
106(2)
Inbred Insularity, Complacency
108(3)
Simultaneities in the Demographic Lifecycle
111(4)
Lack of Internal Group Coherence
115(12)
The Heterodox Camp: No Chairs---Sorry, Standing Room Only
127(1)
A Break in Intergenerational Transmission, in the Reproduction of Traditions
128(1)
2.3 Godfathers, Uncles and Nephews: The Gathering Foe
129(21)
2.3.1 The Trojan Horse: By the Pricking of My Thumbs
129(3)
2.3.2 Forming the Academy
132(4)
Meanwhile, at the Orthodox Party---A Merry Game of Musical Chairs
136(2)
2.3.3 The Chess Master
138(12)
2.4 The Campaign: How the War Was Lost and Won
150(29)
2.4.1 The Orthodox Gambit: Capture the External Commanding Heights
150(3)
2.4.2 Carrots and Commanders
153(16)
2.4.3 Modus Operandi: Masters, Mandarins and Interlocking Committees
169(3)
References
172(7)
3 Worlds Beyond Cambridge: The Global Web of the `Neoliberal Thought Collective'
179(116)
3.1 Conjunctures
181(14)
3.1.1 1930s, The Prelude
181(1)
LSE Versus Cambridge
181(4)
Emigre Economists: The Benefactions of Lenin and Hitler
185(6)
3.1.2 1940s, The Cascade
191(1)
3.1.3 Keynesianism: Divergent Receptions
192(1)
Post-war Affinity in the UK
193(1)
Post-New Deal Hostility in the USA
193(2)
3.2 Spreading the Word: Messiahs, Messages, Methods
195(39)
3.2.1 Ideas and Ideologies: Manufacturers and Retailers
195(7)
3.2.2 USA: Early Ideological Entrepreneurs of Libertarianism
202(1)
Harold Luhnow: The Volker Fund and its Dollars
202(8)
Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) and its Facilitators
210(2)
3.2.3 Europe: Friedrich Hayek and the Mont Pelerin Society
212(1)
Antecedents
212(6)
Pilgrims Atop a Mountain, Mont Pelerin, Switzerland, April 1947
218(1)
Financial Sponsors
219(3)
The First Meeting of Minds
222(5)
Sarcastic Schumpeter, Sceptical Solow, Scathing Samuelson
227(2)
3.2.4 UK: Antony Fisher, Global Venture Capitalist of Think Tanks
229(5)
3.3 Branding the Message: The `Nobel' Prize
234(19)
3.3.1 The Stockholm Connection: Ideological Entrepreneurs
235(5)
3.3.2 Some Early Awards: Setting the Direction
240(1)
Jan Tinbergen---Ragnar Frisch 1969
240(1)
Samuelson 1970
241(1)
Gunnar Myrdal---Friedrich von Hayek 1974
242(4)
Milton Friedman 1976
246(3)
3.3.3 Mont Pelerin Society and the `Nobel'---A Golden Embrace
249(1)
3.3.4 Cambridge Heterodoxy?
250(1)
3.3.5 `An Ideological Coup'
251(2)
3.4 Reaching Politics: Weaponising the Message
253(18)
3.4.1 Santiago de Chile: Pinochet the Pioneer
253(1)
Chicago and its Cowboys
253(4)
Thatcher: Romancing Pinochet's Chile
257(5)
3.4.2 The White House: Reagan, a Disciple
262(2)
3.4.3 10 Downing Street: Thatcher, a Devotee
264(5)
More than its Weight in Gold---The Market Price of Symbolic Capital
269(1)
3.4.4 Pulling Together
269(2)
3.5 Besieging Cambridge: The Chicago--MFT--LSE Trinity
271(24)
3.5.1 A Cross-Atlantic Triangle
271(1)
3.5.2 Diversity of Practice
271(4)
3.5.3 Unity of Purpose
275(10)
References
285(10)
4 Camp Skirmishes Over Interstitial Spaces: Journals, Seminars, Textbooks
295(120)
4.1 The Battle of Teruel---The Day before
296(1)
4.2 Journals
297(25)
4.2.1 EJ Leaves `Home'---The Loss of a Flagship
297(8)
4.2.2 CJE Arrives---A Forum of One's Own
305(14)
4.2.3 Cambridge Economic Policy Review: One Crowded Hour of Glorious Life
319(3)
4.3 Seminars
322(47)
4.3.1 Cambridge Economic Club---A Marshallian Precursor: 1884--1890, 1896--?
329(1)
4.3.2 Political Economy Club: From Keynes to Robertson to Kahn---Dazzling to Dour
330(4)
4.3.3 The Marshall Society: A Socialisation into Economics and Its Purposes
334(5)
4.3.4 Piero Sraffa's Research Students Seminar: A Precocious Nursery
339(5)
4.3.5 In Retrospect, Austin Robinson on the Cambridge Circus: The Engine Room of The General Theory
344(1)
4.3.6 Cambridge--LSE Joint Seminar: Jousting Juniors
345(2)
4.3.7 Kahn's `Secret' Seminar at King's: Fires in the Kitchen
347(6)
4.3.8 The Richard Stone Common Room: Typhoo and Typhoons
353(3)
4.3.9 Ajit Singh's Political Economy Seminar at Queens': Young Turks
356(4)
4.3.10 Arestis and Kitson Political Economy Seminar at St. Catherine's College
360(1)
4.3.11 Hahn's Churchill Seminar: Only Maths and Neoclassical, Others Beware
361(1)
4.3.12 Cambridge Growth Project Seminar at DAE
362(1)
4.3.13 Hahn's `Quaker' Risk Seminar: The Rising Tide
363(1)
4.3.14 Matthews's CLARE Group: The Master's Lodge of Moderate Practitioners
364(3)
4.3.15 Lawson---Realism and Social Ontology: Ways of Seeing and Framing
367(2)
4.4 Textbooks
369(34)
4.4.1 Distant Thunder: Keynes and McCarthy, Tarshis and Samuelson
371(6)
4.4.2 Lawrence Klein and the Paradox of The Keynesian Revolution
377(1)
Puzzle
378(1)
Ph.D.---At Samuelson's Feet
378(1)
Cowles Commission---The New Dealers
379(1)
The Keynesian Revolution: The Extra
Chapter---Klein, Then a Closet Marxist?
380(5)
Beyond Keynes
385(1)
UMich and McCarthyism
386(5)
Policy to Forecasting
391(2)
Resolution
393(1)
4.4.3 `Death of a Revolutionary Textbook': Robinson and Eatwell
394(5)
4.4.4 An `Applied Economics' Textbook That Wasn't: Joan and Young Friends
399(4)
4.5 The Battle of Teruel---The Day After
403(12)
Appendix 4.1 First off the Blocks: Mabel Timlin's Keynesian Economics, 1942
403(3)
References
406(9)
5 The DAE Trilogy
415(24)
5.1 Origins and Evolution
415(15)
5.1.1 Origins
415(2)
5.1.2 Evolution: Substance and Styles
417(3)
5.1.3 Foundations of Stone
420(3)
5.1.4 Reddaway's Method: Eclectic Development
423(3)
5.1.5 Godley: Turbulent Times
426(4)
5.2 End of the Golden Age: The Decade of Discontent
430(3)
5.3 The Trilogy: Discrete Episodes or a Serial Campaign?
433(6)
Appendix 5.1 DAE---Finding a Good Home
436(1)
References
437(2)
6 Cambridge Economic Policy Group: Beheading a Turbulent Priest
439(78)
6.1 Charged Conjuncture
442(42)
6.1.1 Imbroglios of1974: Old Versus New Cambridge Versus the Establishment
442(2)
6.1.2 The Enigma of Kahn
444(9)
6.1.3 Kaldor: On Radical Policy Implications of New Cambridge, 1976
453(3)
6.1.4 Cambridge Squabbles: Spillover into Whitehall?
456(4)
6.1.5 Triggering Crisis: The Pivot of the OPEC Price Hikes
460(4)
6.1.6 1979: Enter Margaret Thatcher, Right-Wing, Upfront
464(2)
6.1.7 The Case of the Odd Consensus: The Letter by 364 Economists, 1981
466(4)
6.1.8 Thatcher in the Garage of the Federal Reserve
470(2)
6.1.9 1981: Brixton Riots, Toxteth Fires: "A Concentration of Hopelessness"
472(2)
6.1.10 The CEPG: A Thorn in the Thatcher Hide
474(3)
6.1.11 The Bogey of Import Controls and the Spectre of Bennism
477(7)
6.2 SSRC and CEPG: Dispensing Instant Injustice
484(9)
6.2.1 Posner's Parlour
484(5)
6.2.2 Posner's Process
489(4)
6.3 Epilogue
493(24)
6.3.1 Vengeance
493(1)
6.3.2 The Team Scattered
494(2)
6.3.3 The Model Reincarnated
496(4)
6.3.4 The Rehabilitation of Wynne
500(2)
6.3.5 Wynne Godley: `My Credo' ...
502(3)
6.3.6 The Pacification of the CEPG
505(4)
Appendix 6.1 Old Cambridge, New Cambridge, 1974: and All the King's Men
509(1)
1 Letter WG to RFK 23 May
1974. JVR/vii/228/3/3
509(1)
2 Letter NK to RFK 20 May
1974. JVR/vii/228/3/14-16
509(1)
3 Letter from RFK and MP to NK 24 May
1974. JVR/vii/228/3/17-20
509(1)
4 Letter from RFK and MP to NK 28 May
1974. JVR/vii/228/3/24
510(1)
5 Letter from FC to RFK 29 May
1974. JVR/7/228/3/25
510(1)
6 Reply from RFK to FC 6 June
1974. JVR/7/228/3/24
510(1)
7 In the interim, NK replied to RFK and MP. JVR/7/228/3/26
510(1)
8 Letter from NK to RFK. RFK/12/2/132/3
511(1)
References
511(6)
7 `Unintended' Collateral Damage? The Cambridge Economic Policy Group and the Joseph-Rothschild-Posner SSRC Enquiry, 1982
517(46)
7.1 Joseph---Rothschild---Posner---Godley
518(2)
7.2 The Posner-the-Saviour Narrative
520(13)
7.3 Setting Up the Enquiry
533(1)
7.4 Who Proposed Rothschild?
534(3)
7.5 Rothschild Report Writing Process
537(2)
7.6 The Judgement of Rothschild
539(1)
7.7 Between Draft and Release and Response: Handshakes and Cigars
540(3)
7.8 Did Posner Get Away with Just a Change of Name?
543(5)
7.9 CEPG---Collateral Damage? Or, Traded Down the River?
548(2)
7.10 The Rothschild Report: Gleanings on Macroeconomic Modelling
550(1)
7.11 Lord Kaldor---Off the Record, Off the Cuff, Off the Mark?
551(4)
7.12 Lord Harris' Vitriol
555(1)
7.13 Catholicity and Independence
556(3)
7.14 Rothschild's Last Word
559(1)
7.15 Joseph's Last Laugh
560(3)
References
560(3)
8 Cambridge Growth Project: Running the Gauntlet
563(34)
8.1 Background and Conjuncture
564(5)
8.1.1 The Decision
566(3)
8.2 Substantive Issues
569(7)
8.2.1 No Innovation?
569(1)
8.2.2 Catholicity, Turnover and the Value of Disaggregation
569(3)
8.2.3 Use of Input-Output Tables
572(1)
8.2.4 CGP Presence in Policy Debates
573(1)
8.2.5 Insularity
574(1)
8.2.6 On Exploiting the Cheap Labour of Graduate Students
574(2)
8.3 Issues of Procedural Probity
576(6)
8.3.1 Shifting Goalposts Across Evaluations
576(1)
8.3.2 Unequal Application of Criterion of Commercial Funding
577(1)
8.3.3 Public Good or Private Resource?
577(2)
8.3.4 ESRC Ignored CGP Model Performance: Why?
579(1)
8.3.5 Compromised `Independent' Evidence
580(2)
8.4 Other Concerns
582(5)
8.4.1 `Reds'?
582(1)
8.4.2 Crowding Out Competitors?
582(1)
8.4.3 Deadweight Loss of Built-up Intellectual Capital
582(2)
8.4.4 Gratuitously Offensive: Up Close and Out of Order
584(1)
8.4.5 The Consortium: `Revived Talk of Conspiracy Theory'
585(1)
8.4.6 In Defence, a Lone Voice, Overruled
586(1)
8.5 Epilogue: CGP---Life After Death?
587(10)
Appendix 8.1 CGP Staff Members, Timeline 1960--1987
594(1)
Appendix 8.2 Publications of CGP Staff
595(1)
References
596(1)
9 The DAE Review 1984--1987: A Four-Year Inquisition
597(94)
9.1 The Campaign of Attrition
598(9)
9.1.1 Occluded Origins
599(5)
9.1.2 Two Stages, Two Committees
604(3)
9.2 The Orthodox Gambit
607(24)
9.2.1 The Agenda Revealed
608(9)
9.2.2 The Game Plan: Four Options
617(1)
Closure
617(1)
Separation
618(2)
Absorption
620(3)
Capture
623(2)
9.2.3 External Critiques: Collusion as Consultation?
625(6)
9.3 The Heterodox Defence
631(17)
9.3.1 Solidarity, Testimonies, Rebuttals
633(10)
9.3.2 Chinks in the DAE Armour?
643(5)
9.4 On the Rack: Bleeding the DAE
648(27)
9.4.1 The Secretary General, The Prince and the Chess Master
654(3)
9.4.2 The Capture
657(3)
9.4.3 How it Transpired, Perhaps Not Just by Chance
660(10)
9.4.4 Checkmate: A Constitutional Coup
670(5)
9.5 Epilogue
675(16)
Appendix 9.1 DAE Review Committees: Composition and Terms of Reference
680(1)
First Advisory Committee Constituted: Easter Term 1984; Reported: May 1985
680(1)
Second Advisory Committee Constituted: Easter Term 1985; Reported April 1987
680(1)
Appendix 9.2 Labour Studies Group: Dispersed, Not Defeated
681(6)
References
687(4)
10 Sociology: The Departure of `Stray Colleagues in a Vaguely Cognate Discipline'
691(74)
10.1 Early Years: Hostility, Neglect, Subordination
692(24)
10.2 Sociology: Growing Up Amongst Economists
716(10)
10.3 Hostile Public Spaces: SSRC, Rothschild-1982 and Sociology
726(8)
10.3.1 Entrenched Resistance to the Emergence of SSRC
726(2)
10.3.2 In the Court of Public Opinion: Open Season on Sociology
728(2)
10.3.3 The Joseph-Rothschild Assault
730(4)
10.4 Back in Cambridge, 1984--1986: To Remain Or to Exit, That Was the Question
734(10)
10.4.1 Sociology in the DAE Review: Crossfire and Crossroads
734(2)
10.4.2 Cometh the Hour, Cometh Tony Giddens
736(8)
10.5 Archival Insights: Harboured Preferences Revealed
744(11)
10.5.1 Do Please Stay, Pleaded the Heterodox
744(2)
10.5.2 Clear Out Now, Growled the Orthodox
746(1)
10.5.3 Do What Is Best for You, Whispered the Faculty Board
747(1)
10.5.4 Time to Choose: The Sociologists Speak
748(7)
10.6 Leaving Home, a Space of Its Own
755(10)
References
758(7)
11 Development on the Periphery: Exit and Exile
765(80)
11.1 Cambridge Development Studies: The Heterodox Inheritance
767(10)
11.1.1 The Capitalist Economy and Its Cambridge Critics
767(2)
11.1.2 Bridges to Development
769(8)
11.2 Evolution of the Teaching Project: Multiple Identities
777(33)
11.2.1 Timelines
777(2)
11.2.2 In University Space: The Professionalisation of `Development Studies'
779(1)
The Early Years: Fine-tuning Imperial Instruction, 1926--1969
779(8)
Turbulence and Transformation: Revising the Mandate, 1969--1982
787(13)
11.2.3 In Faculty Space: The Disciplining of `Development Economies'
800(8)
11.2.4 Against the Mainstream: Subaltern Perspectives
808(2)
11.3 Development Research: Ebbs and Flows
810(18)
11.3.1 Cambridge--India Highway: Cambridge in India
810(8)
11.3.2 Cambridge--India Highway: India in Cambridge
818(3)
11.3.3 Not Just India
821(5)
11.3.4 Bi-modal Distribution of Development Interest
826(2)
11.4 1996: Divorce and Eviction
828(4)
11.5 A Credible Counterfactual
832(13)
Appendix 11.1 Arguments in Support of Continuation of Development Studies Course in Cambridge
836(3)
References
839(6)
12 From Riches to Rags? Economic History Becomes History at the Faculty of Economics
845(120)
12.1 Introduction: Economics and Economic History
846(1)
12.2 The Pre-War Period: 1939, Marshallian
847(13)
12.2.1 At the Faculty of History
847(1)
Cunningham to Clapham via Marshall
847(2)
Clapham to Postan via Power
849(3)
12.2.2 At the Faculty of Economics and Politics
852(1)
Maurice Dobb, 1900--1976
852(8)
12.3 Post-War Period-1, 1945-1980s: Post-Keynesian
860(38)
12.3.1 At the Faculty of Economics and Politics
860(1)
On the DAE Side
861(14)
On the Faculty Side
875(6)
12.3.2 At the Faculty of History
881(1)
`Munia' Postan
881(11)
The Turn to Business Studies-I, David Joslin 1965--1970
892(3)
The Turn to Business Studies-II, Donald Coleman 1971--1981
895(3)
12.4 Post-War Period-II, 1980s: Unravelling and Divergence
898(28)
12.4.1 At the Faculty of History
898(1)
The Turn to Business Studies-III, Barry Supple 1981--1993
898(1)
Modern Times: Martin Daunton 1997--2015
899(3)
12.4.2 At the Faculty of Economics: Turbulence, Transitions and Affinities
902(1)
Cluster 1 Humphries---Horrell
903(11)
Cluster 2 Kitson---Solomou---Weak
914(4)
Cluster 3 Ogilvie---Edwards
918(6)
Cluster 4 Toke Aidt
924(2)
12.5 c.2020, Here, to Where?
926(39)
12.5.1 Economic History at the Faculty of Economics: Full Stop?
926(5)
12.5.2 At the Faculty of History: New Turnings
931(3)
Appendix 12.1 Economic History and Accounting at the DAE
934(4)
Appendix 12.2 Locating Phyllis Deane in National Accounting and Feminist Discourse: A Supplementary Note
938(15)
References
953(12)
13 Research Assessment Exercises: Exorcising Heterodox Apostasy from `Economics'
965(54)
13.1 The Agenda
966(2)
13.2 The Teaching Body: Unification, Hierarchy, Control
968(5)
13.3 1986: Swinnerton-Dyer and the Genesis of the RAE
973(3)
13.4 1986--1989: Frank Hahn and the Orthodox Capture of the RES
976(7)
13.5 Through the RES: Controlling Panel Selection
983(6)
13.6 Outcomes
989(2)
13.7 Consequences and Critiques
991(12)
13.7.1 Gaming
992(1)
13.7.2 Competition and Conflict: Managerialism
993(2)
13.7.3 Individual Stress
995(2)
13.7.4 Medium Over Message: Diamonds for Ever
997(1)
13.7.5 Unethical Research Practices and Shaky Quality Proxies
998(2)
13.7.6 The Atrophy of Collective Research Traditions and Environments
1000(1)
13.7.7 The Loss of Intrinsic Values
1001(1)
13.7.8 Undervaluation of Undergraduate Teaching
1002(1)
13.8 The Suppression of Heterodox Economics and Economists
1003(4)
13.9 Follow Big Brother: Elimination of Heterodoxy in USA
1007(5)
13.10 1662, Deja Vu
1012(7)
References
1014(5)
14 Reincarnations
1019(60)
14.1 In a Nutshell, a la Joan
1020(1)
14.2 Purges and Purification
1021(2)
14.3 Triumphalism
1023(5)
14.4 A Royal Mess: The Queen's Question
1028(3)
14.5 Students Speak Up
1031(2)
14.5.1 In Cambridge
1031(1)
14.5.2 Elsewhere
1032(1)
14.6 Faculty Performance: A Summary Report Card
1033(3)
14.6.1 Global Ranks
1034(1)
14.6.2 RAEs, REFs
1034(2)
14.7 Exiles and Reincarnations
1036(9)
14.7.1 The DAE Flagships: CGP and CEPG
1037(1)
14.7.2 DAE Industrial Economics: Alan Hughes and the CBR
1038(1)
14.7.3 Judge Business School
1038(4)
14.7.4 The Economic Historians
1042(1)
14.7.5 Sociology: That `Vaguely Cognate Discipline'
1043(1)
14.7.6 Development
1043(2)
14.8 Reluctant Regrets
1045(12)
14.8.1 Robin Matthews
1045(1)
14.8.2 Frank Hahn
1046(1)
14.8.3 David Newbery
1047(1)
14.8.4 TonyAtkinson
1048(4)
14.8.5 Francois Bourguignon
1052(1)
14.5.6 Alan Blinder
1053(1)
14.5.7 Peter Diamond
1054(1)
14.8.8 Partha Dasgupta via Robert Neild
1054(2)
14.8.9 Another Snow/lake Moment?
1056(1)
14.9 Donors: Leveraging a Reboot?
1057(11)
14.10 The Great Banyan
1068(11)
Appendix 14.1 Letter of Protest by Graduate Students, 2001
1073(2)
References
1075(4)
References 1079(68)
Name Index 1147(28)
Subject Index 1175
Ashwani Saith is an Emeritus Professor at the International Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University Rotterdam, and former Professor of Development Studies & Director, Development Studies Institute, London School of Economics.