History of Political Economy
1969 - 2020
Current editor(s): Kevin D. Hoover From Duke University Press Duke University Press 905 W. Main Street, Suite 18B Durham, NC 27701. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Center for the History of Political Economy Webmaster (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 52, issue 4, 2020
- The Origins of the CES Production Function pp. 621-652

- Jeff Biddle
- Postwar Third-Way Perspectives: François Perroux on National Income and Planning pp. 653-682

- Alexandre Mendes Cunha
- The Early Mathematics of Welfare: The Contribution of Bruno de Finetti pp. 683-707

- Mario Pomini
- The Temperature of the Brain: Edgeworth’s Thermodynamic Analogies of Utility Measurement pp. 709-740

- Thomas Michael Mueller
- Defense of an Open Economy Model for Post–Civil War Spain: The Prologues of Manuel de Torres MartÃnez, 1945–60 pp. 741-772

- Alfonso Expósito and RocÃo Sánchez-Lissen
- Georg Friedrich Knapp Was Not a "Chartalist" pp. 773-793

- Juan Ramón Rallo
Volume 52, issue 3, 2020
- Introduction: Measuring Matters pp. 413-434

- Pedro Ramos Pinto and Poornima Paidipaty
- Between Pareto and Gini: The Origins of Personal Inequality Measurement in Italy, 1894–1939 pp. 435-454

- Giacomo Gabbuti
- Accounting for the Nation, Marginalizing the Empire: Taxable Capacity and Colonial Rule in the Early Twentieth Century pp. 455-472

- Eleanor Newbigin
- Testing Measures: Decolonization and Economic Power in 1960s India pp. 473-497

- Poornima Paidipaty
- How Poverty Became a Violation of Human Rights: The Production of a New Political Subject, France and Belgium, 1964–88 pp. 499-517

- Daniel Zamora Vargas
- Social Democracy and the Problem of Equality: Economic Analysis and Political Argument in the United Kingdom pp. 519-538

- James Tomlinson
- Measuring Difference? The United Nations’ Shift from Progress to Poverty pp. 539-560

- Maria Bach and Mary S. Morgan
- Measuring the Middle: Technopolitics and the Making of Brazil’s New Middle Class pp. 561-587

- Moises Kopper
- When Measurements Matter: Poverty, Wealth, and the Politics of Inequality in the United States pp. 589-607

- Alice O’Connor
- Afterword: Inequality, a Guide for the Reflexive pp. 609-619

- Sanjay Reddy
Volume 52, issue 2, 2020
- John Maynard Keynes, H. G. Wells, and a Problematic Utopia pp. 211-238

- Phillip W. Magness and James R. Harrigan
- The Wrong Marshall: Notes on the Marshall family in Response to Biographies of the Economist, Alfred Marshall pp. 239-273

- Megan Stevens and Alun Stevens
- The Quarrel of Policy Advisers That Became Development Experts: Currie and Hirschman in Colombia pp. 275-306

- Andres Alvarez, Andres M. Guiot-Isaac and Jimena Hurtado
- Institutionalism in Action: Balancing the Substantive Imbalances of “the Economy†through the Veil of Money pp. 307-339

- Onur Ozgode
- Was Sismondi a “Smithian†Critic of Industrialization? pp. 341-366

- Nicolas Eyguesier
- The Brazilian Connection in Milton Friedman’s 1967 Presidential Address and 1976 Nobel Lecture pp. 367-396

- Mauro Boianovsky
Volume 52, issue 1, 2020
- Fifty Years of HOPE: Changing Priorities in the Historiography of Economics pp. 1-46

- Jose Edwards
- Dudley Seers, the Institute for Development Studies, and the Fracturing of International Development Thought in the 1960s and 1970s pp. 47-75

- Stephen Macekura
- The Hostility of William Stanley Jevons toward John Stuart Mill: The Fourth Dimension pp. 77-99

- David Stack
- Technical Progress and Structural Change in Jean Fourastie’s Theory of Development pp. 101-133

- Alain Alcouffe and David le Bris
- "Exceptional and Unimportant"? Externalities, Competitive Equilibrium, and the Myth of a Pigovian Tradition pp. 135-170

- Steven G. Medema
- Adam Smith’s Labor Theory of (Real) Value: The Case of a Misfiring Critique pp. 171-190

- Terry Peach
Volume 51, issue 6, 2019
- Economic Knowledge in Socialism, 1945–89: Editors’ Introduction pp. 1-4

- Till Dueppe and Ivan Boldyrev
- "From Each according to Their Ability, to Each according to Their Need": Calorie Money and Technical Norms in Mid-Twentieth-Century Hungary pp. 7-29

- Martha Lampland
- By Force of Power: On the Relationship between Social Science Knowledge and Political Power in Economics in Communist Hungary pp. 30-51

- Gyorgy Peteri
- The Economics of Everyday Life in "New" Socialism: Czechoslovak Public Economics and Economic Reform in the Prague Spring Era pp. 52-72

- VÃtÄ›zslav Sommer
- "Commodity Sui Generis": The Discourses of Soviet Political Economy of Socialism pp. 75-99

- Oleg Ananyin and Denis Melnik
- "The Honest Marxist": Yakov Kronrod and the Politics of Cold War Economics in the Post-Stalin USSR pp. 100-126

- Yakov Feygin
- Administrative Monsters: Yurii Yaremenko’s Critique of the Late Soviet State pp. 127-151

- Adam Leeds
- The Growth and Marcescence of the "System for Optimal Functioning of the Economy" (SOFE) pp. 155-179

- Richard E. Ericson
- From Pattern Recognition to Economic Disequilibrium: Emmanuil Braverman’s Theory of Control of the Soviet Economy pp. 180-203

- Olessia Kirtchik
- Systems Analysis as Infrastructural Knowledge: Scientific Expertise and Dissensus under State Socialism pp. 204-227

- Egle Rindzeviciute
- The Bureaucratic Bourgeoisie: How the Soviet Union Lost Faith in State-Led Economic Development pp. 231-252

- Chris Miller
- The Struggle over Structural Adjustment: Socialist Revolution versus Capitalist Counterrevolution in Yugoslavia and the World pp. 253-276

- Johanna Bockman
- Shestidesyatniki Economics, the Idea of Convergence, and Perestroika pp. 277-299

- Joachim Zweynert
Volume 51, issue 5, 2019
- Survey of Recent Work in the History of Econometrics: A Witness Report pp. 805-826

- Marcel Boumans
- The Death of Welfare Economics: History of a Controversy pp. 827-865

- Herrade Igersheim
- Income Distribution, Consumption, and Economic Growth in Italy: Kaldor’s Theory versus the Life Cycle Hypothesis, 1960s and 1970s pp. 867-900

- Antonella Rancan
- Jean-Baptiste Say on Free Trade pp. 901-934

- Guy Numa
- Back to Agriculture? Malthus, Torrens, and Ricardo on International Trade and Structural Change pp. 935-955

- Giuseppe Freni, Neri Salvadori and Rodolfo Signorino
Volume 51, issue 4, 2019
- Five Decades of HOPE pp. 601-669

- Yann Giraud
- Women in the Early Years of the American Economic Association: A Membership beyond the Professoriate Per Se pp. 671-702

- Ann Mari May and Robert Dimand
- Malthus on the Desire of Bettering Our Condition and the Vis Medicatrix Reipublicae pp. 731-751

- John Pullen
- On Terry Peach’s Unconvincing “Reconsideration†of Adam Smith’s Theory of Value pp. 753-777

- Roy H. Grieve
Volume 51, issue 3, 2019
- The History of Macroeconometric Modeling: An Introduction pp. 391-400

- Marcel Boumans and Pedro Garcia Duarte
- Lawrence R. Klein and the Making of Large-Scale Macroeconometric Modeling, 1938–55 pp. 401-423

- Erich Pinzon-Fuchs
- The Ordinary Business of Macroeconometric Modeling: Working on the Fed-MIT-Penn Model, 1964–74 pp. 425-447

- Roger Backhouse and Beatrice Cherrier
- Empirical Macroeconomics in a Policy Context: The Fed-MIT-Penn Model versus the St. Louis Model, 1965–75 pp. 449-470

- Antonella Rancan
- Bank Behavior in Large-Scale Macroeconometric Models of the 1960s pp. 471-491

- Juan Acosta and Goulven Rubin
- Inference to the Best Model of the Consumption Function pp. 493-513

- Hsiang-Ke Chao
- The Vatican Conferences of October 7–13, 1963: Controversies over the Neutrality of Econometric Modeling pp. 515-534

- Ariane Dupont-Kieffer
- Reacting to the Lucas Critique: The Keynesians' Replies pp. 535-556

- Aurélien Goutsmedt, Erich Pinzon-Fuchs, Matthieu Renault and Francesco Sergi
- A Tale of a Tool: The Impact of Sims's Vector Autoregressions on Macroeconometrics pp. 557-578

- Boris Salazar and Daniel Otero
- How Saline Is the Solow Residual? Debating Real Business Cycles in the 1980s and 1990s pp. 579-599

- Aurelien Saidi
Volume 51, issue 2, 2019
- "Capitalism and the Jews": Milton Friedman and His Critics pp. 193-236

- Jeff Lipkes
- "From Each according to Ability; To Each according to Needs": Origin, Meaning, and Development of Socialist Slogans pp. 237-257

- Luc Bovens and Adrien Lutz
- "The Group": The Making of the Chicago Monetary Tradition, 1927–36 pp. 259-296

- George Tavlas
- The "Riefler-Keynes" Doctrine and Federal Reserve Policy in the Great Depression pp. 297-327

- Judge Glock
- A Tale of Two Critics: Erich Fromm and Tibor Scitovsky on the Consumer Society pp. 329-359

- Viviana Di Giovinazzo
Volume 51, issue 1, 2019
- Craufurd D. W. Goodwin (1934–2017) pp. 1-9

- Kevin D. Hoover
- Interpreters of Economic Ideas: Thurman Arnold (1891–1969) pp. 23-69

- Craufurd D. W. Goodwin
- Maynard Keynes of Bloomsbury pp. 73-76

- Craufurd D. W. Goodwin
- Keynes as Policy Adviser pp. 77-81

- E. Roy Weintraub
- Keynes and Economics pp. 83-88

- Kevin D. Hoover
- Keynes and Hayek pp. 89-94

- Bruce Caldwell
- Craufurd Goodwin: A Historian of Political Economy pp. 95-99

- Neil De Marchi
- Craufurd Goodwin, Storyteller pp. 101-113

- Tiago Mata and Harro Maas
- Craufurd Goodwin as a Historian of Canadian Economic Thought pp. 115-127

- Robert Dimand
- Craufurd Goodwin and Duke University, 1955–1970 pp. 129-135

- E. Roy Weintraub
- Craufurd Goodwin: Philanthropy and International Education pp. 137-143

- Michael Nacht
- Craufurd Goodwin as Teacher and Editor pp. 145-153

- Paul Dudenhefer
- Craufurd Goodwin as Graduate Mentor pp. 155-168

- Robert Leonard
- Craufurd Goodwin and Graduate Education pp. 169-172

- Leigh Deneef
- Craufurd Goodwin and Graduate Liberal Studies at Duke University: A Tribute pp. 173-182

- Donna Zapf
- Cosmopolitan Craufurd Goodwin pp. 183-185

- David Warsh
- Craufurd Goodwin: Economist as Collector pp. 187-191

- Kevin D. Hoover
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