Chapter 1. General Introduction: Why Should We Study the History of Economic Theory?.- Chapter 2. Introduction.- Chapter 3. Economics in Cambridge: Alfred Marshall, the Old Cambridge School, and Their Opponents in England.- Chapter 4. Economics in Lausanne: Vilfredo Pareto and the Lausanne School.- Chapter 5. Economics in Berlin and Vienna: A Mosaic of Theories and Research Programs.- Chapter 6. Economics in the European Peripheries.- Chapter 7. Economics in the United States: Between Classicism, Neoclassicism, and Institutionalism.- Chapter 8. Great Controversies.- Chapter 9. The Great War and the End of an Era.
Roberto Marchionatti is Professor of Economics at the Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Turin, Italy and Fellow of the Accademia delle Scienze di Torino, Italy. He has been Visiting Scholar at the University of New York, USA and University of Cambridge, UK, and he is Life Member of Clare Hall, Cambridge University. He is Editor of Annals of Fondazione Luigi Einaudi: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Economics, History and Political Science, and he has been co-editor of History of Economic Ideas. He has published over 40 journal articles, and more than 15 books as well as a great number of contributions to edited volumes.
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