Contents:
Introduction
Samir Amin, Tom Asimakopulos, Clarence Edwin Ayres, A.K. Bagchi,
Thomas Balogh, Paul Alexander Baran, Luiz Gonzaga de Mello
Belluzzo, Amit Bhaduri, Krishna Bharadwaj, Kenneth E. Boulding,
Samuel Bowles, Harry Braverman, Nikolai Ivanoviich Bukharin,
Sukhamoy Chakravarty, Victoria Chick, John Roger Commons, John
Cornwall, Keith Cowling, Paul Davidson, Meghnad Desai, Carlos F.
Diaz-Alejandro, Maurice Herbert Dobb, John Eatwell, Alfred Eichner,
Ben Fine, Duncan K. Foley, Andre Gunder Frank, Cels Furtado, John
Kenneth Galbraith, Pierangelo Garegnani, Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen,
Herbert Gintis, Wynne Godley, Richard Murphey Goodwin, David M.
Gordon, Augusto Graziani, Keith B. Griffin, Peter Groenewegen, G.C.
Harcourt, Robert L. Heilbroner, Rudolf Hilferding, Albert O.
Hirschman, John Atkinson Hobson, Stephen Herbert Hymer, Makoto
Itoh, Nicholas August Ludwig Jacob Johannsen, Richard Kahn,
Nicholas Kaldor, Michal Kalecki, John Maynard Keynes, David P.
Levine, Adolph Lowe, Rosa Luxemburg, Bruce MacFarlane, Harry
Magdoff, Ernest Mandel, Gardiner C. Means, Ronald L. Meek, Hyman P.
Minsky, Wesley Clair Mitchell, Gunnar Myrdal, Claudio Napoleoni,
Edward J. Nell, Alec Nove, Domenico Mario Nuti, Nobuo Okishio,
Luigi Lodovico Pasinetti, Prabhat Patnaik, Francois Perroux, Aníbal
Pinto Santa Cruz, Karl Polanyi, Raul Prebisch, Michael Reich, Joan
Robinson, John E. Roemer, Kurt W. Rothschild, Warren J. Samuels
Bertram Schefold, Dudley Seers, Amartya Sen, George L.S. Shackle,
Anwar M. Shaikh, Howard J. Sherman, Hans Wolfgang Singer, Ajit
Singh, Piero Sraffa
Ian Steedman, Josef Steindl, Paul Streeten, Paul Marlor Sweezy,
Lorie Tarshis
Maria de Conceicao Tavares, L. Taylor, Marc R. Tool, Shigeto Tsuru,
Kozo Uno, Thorsten Veblen, Sidney Weintraub, Thomas E. Weisskopf,
E.L. Wheelwright
Edited by Philip Arestis, University Director of Research, Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy, Department of Land Economy, University of Cambridge and Fellow, Wolfson College, UK and Malcolm Sawyer, Emeritus Professor of Economics, University of Leeds, UK
'This is a fascinating book of the personal stories of how heterodoxy re-emerged, evolved, survived and developed. It makes great reading, not only for sheer enjoyment, but also for gaining insight into the major concerns, theories and policies of dissenting political economy. It is a 'must buy' for anyone interested in alternative perspectives of economy and society, and it is essential for every university library. The editors have done a great job in bringing to life the main concerns of the dissenters in a humanistic fashion. The revival of heterodox political economy commenced in earnest in the 1960s and it is now maturing. Also, its various schools are starting to recognise the many unifying or complementary aspects of its development. This volume provides many insights into the critical concerns likely to become more important in the future, as an increasing number of economists recognise the importance of a broader study of the social and political foundations of production, distribution and exchange, and the reproduction of the institutions underlying such activities.'
Ask a Question About this Product More... |