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The Review of Austrian Economics1992 - 2025
 Current editor(s): Peter Boettke and Christopher Coyne From:Springer
 Society for the Development of Austrian Economics
 Contact information at EDIRC.
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 Volume 38, issue 3, 2025
 
  Militarized climate planning: what is left?   pp. 223-246 Nathan P. Goodman, Jordan K. Lofthouse and Mikayla NovakContractualism in post-colonial state-building: A liberal approach to sovereignty and governmentality   pp. 247-264 Kaleb DemerewThe cybersecurity entrepreneur   pp. 265-286 Mark W. HodginsIndustrial production over the business cycle 1919–2022: R/S and wavelet hurst analysis of multifractality and Austrian business cycle theory   pp. 287-302 Robert F. MulliganThe new political economy of the middle ages: a review essay of the medieval constitution of Liberty   pp. 303-317 Tegan TruittJohn B. Davis’ Identity, Capabilities, and Changing Economics, Cambridge University Press, 2024, pp. 288 + xiv, $34.99   pp. 319-323 Erwin DekkerDariusz Pieńkowski, The Economics of Sustainable Development and Distribution: The Unfairness and Injustice of Milton Friedman’s Capitalism. Routledge Studies in Ecological Economics, Routledge (2024). 196 pages. $180.00   pp. 325-329 Víctor I. EspinosaJohn Hagel III, the Journey Beyond Fear: Leverage the Three Pillars of Positivity to Build Your Success. New York: McGraw Hill, 2021. Iv + 247 pages. USD 28.00 (hardback)   pp. 331-334 Richard E. WagnerCorrection to: John Hagel III, the Journey Beyond fear: leverage the three pillars of positivity to build your success. New York: McGraw Hill, 2021. Iv + 247 pages. USD 28.00 (hardback)   pp. 335-335 Richard E. Wagner Volume 38, issue 2, 2025
 
  Social capital facilitates emergent social learning   pp. 109-130 Alexander Craig and Virgil Henry StorrFinancial innovation, optimal financing structure, an Austrian perspective   pp. 131-148 Jason LermyteBehavioral economics and the problem of altruism   pp. 149-168 Sahar AkhtarUntangling the commons: three different forms of commonality   pp. 169-185 Stefano MoroniComparing the epistemic burdens of liberal transition and central planning   pp. 187-208 Max MoldenSanford Ikeda, a city cannot be a work of art: learning economics and social theory from Jane Jacobs. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023. Xxv + 400 pages. USD 59.99 (hardback)   pp. 209-212 Alain BertaudLorenzo Infantino, Unintended consequences and the social sciences: an intellectual history. Northampton: Edward Elgar, 2023. Xii + 121 pages. USD 99.00 (hardback)   pp. 213-215 Richard E. WagnerCorrection to: Lorenzo Infantino, unintended consequences and the social sciences: an intellectual history. Northampton: Edward Elgar, 2023. Xii + 121 pages. USD 99.00 (hardback)   pp. 217-217 Richard E. WagnerAlicja Sielska (ed.), Transition Economies in Central and Eastern Europe. Austrian Perspectives, Routledge, 2024. 200 pages. 135.00 GBP (hardback)   pp. 219-221 Anthony Evans Volume 38, issue 1, 2025
 
  Conscious choice and economic progress   pp. 1-13 Randall HolcombeSocial problems: implications for Virginia political economy   pp. 15-36 Mikayla NovakA struggle of incomplete visions: Creative destruction vs. The economy of knowledge   pp. 37-53 James McClure, Nathanael Snow and David ThomasIntegrating rationality and spiritedness to correct a misleading dichotomy   pp. 55-71 Sarah Moore and Richard E. WagnerThe perils of regulation and the theory of interventionism – an application to the Berlin rent freeze   pp. 73-90 Max MoldenDeirdre Nansen McCloskey, Beyond Positivism: Behaviorism, and Neoinstitutionalism in Economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2022. 222 pages. 97.50 USD (hardback)   pp. 91-95 Alain MarcianoRandall G. Holcombe, Following Their Leaders: Political Preferences and Public Policy. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2023. Xvi + 213 Pages. 34.99 USD (paperback)   pp. 97-100 Mikayla NovakArthur B. Laffer, Brian Domitrovic, and Jeanne Cairns Sinquefield, taxes have consequences: an income tax history of the United States. New York: Post Hill Press, 2022. 440 Pages. 28.00 USD (hardback)   pp. 101-104 Tyler WattsJonathan Haskel and Stian Westlake, Restarting the Future: How to Fix the Intangible Economy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2022. Xii + 303 pages. 27.95 USD (hardback)   pp. 105-108 Ryan H. Murphy Volume 37, issue 4, 2024
 
  Economic calculation and instruments of interpretation   pp. 363-397 Michael R. Romero and Virgil Henry StorrThe use of algorithms in society   pp. 399-420 Cass R. SunsteinInformation, classification and contestability: a cultural economics approach to Uber’s entry into the taxi industry   pp. 421-442 Anthony EvansThe Austrian Episode   pp. 443-456 Randall HolcombeCoercive advantage   pp. 457-476 Mikayla NovakComparing the effectiveness of private and public sector innovation: A review essay of The myth of the entrepreneurial state   pp. 477-494 Rodney YergerKaren I. Vaughn, Essays on Austrian Economics and Political Economy. Arlington: Mercatus Center, 2021. 314 Pages. USD 24.95 (paperback)   pp. 495-497 Abigail R. HallKarl Wennberg and Christian Sandström (Eds.), Questioning the Entrepreneurial State: Status-quo, Pitfalls, and the Need for Credible Innovation Policy. Cham: Springer, 2022. xi + 367 Pages. USD 59.99 (hardback)   pp. 499-501 Randall HolcombeAlexander Linsbichler, Viel mehr als nur Ökonomie: Köpfe und Ideen der österreichischen Schule der Nationalökonomie   pp. 503-505 Michael J. Douma Volume 37, issue 3, 2024
 
  What should economists do?: A historical perspective   pp. 237-254 Alain MarcianoInterdependence: good, bad, or indifferent?   pp. 255-266 Zachary A. Collier and Zachary J. GochenourWhat can complexity learn from Misesian economics?   pp. 267-291 Vicente Moreno-CasasThe perils of lax economic policy: The case of Chile during the COVID-19 pandemic   pp. 293-310 Victor I. EspinosaCorrection to: The perils of lax economic policy: the case of Chile during the COVID-19 pandemic   pp. 311-312 Victor I. EspinosaAustrians should reject North and Acemoglu: Some critical reflections on Peter Boettke’s The Struggle for a Better World   pp. 313-321 Deirdre Nansen McCloskeyFamily, equality, and public and private distribution: a review essay of Melinda Cooper’s family values   pp. 323-331 Lauren K. HallTwo worlds collide: A review essay of Humanomics: moral sentiments and the wealth of nations for the twenty-first century   pp. 333-349 Marcus Shera and Kacey Reeves WestMark Koyama and Jared Rubin, How the world became rich: The historical origins of economic growth   pp. 351-355 Caleb PetittBruce Caldwell (Ed.), Mont Pèlerin 1947: transcripts of the Founding Meeting of the Mont Pèlerin Society. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 2022. Xxiv + 222 Pages. USD 34.95 (hardback)   pp. 357-362 Alexandre Padilla Volume 37, issue 2, 2024
 
  The symbolic work of prices   pp. 117-131 Akash Miharia, Jan Osborn and Bart WilsonThe wisdom of classical political economy in economics: incorporated or lost?   pp. 133-152 Gabriel F. Benzecry and Daniel J. SmithOpportunity discovery or judgment? Value investing’s incompatibility with Austrian economics revisited   pp. 153-177 David J. Rapp, Andrea Rapp and Trevor DaherRefuting Samuelson’s capitulation on the re-switching of techniques in the Cambridge capital controversy   pp. 179-197 Carlo MilanaAm I a good puppet? A review essay of Escaping Paternalism: Rationality, Behavioral Economics, and Public Policy   pp. 199-211 André QuintasFreedom in context: A review essay of The Dialectics of Liberty   pp. 213-224 Alexander CraigScott Sumner, The Money Illusion: Market Monetarism, the Great Recession, and the Future of Monetary Policy   pp. 225-228 Bryan P. CutsingerCaleb S. Fuller, No Free Lunch: Six Economic Lies You’ve Been Taught and Probably Believe   pp. 229-232 David S. LucasJames Tooley, Really Good Schools: Global Lessons for High-Caliber, Low-Cost Education, Oakland: Independent Institute, 2021. xx + 404 pages. 29.95 USD (hardback)   pp. 233-236 Stephen G. Zimmer Volume 37, issue 1, 2024
 
  What Can Industrial Policy Do? Evidence from Singapore   pp. 1-34 Bryan CheangInformation, Uncertainty & Espionage   pp. 35-54 Peter Phillips and Gabriela PohlSoft monetary constraint and shortage in the European sovereign debt economy   pp. 55-80 Eric Magnin and Nikolay NenovskyThe Firm as Observer: Data Resources and Firm Longevity in Bylund’s Austrian Theory of the Firm   pp. 81-93 Mark A. DeWeaverLiberalism, rhetoric, and how to be post-modern: a review essay of Deirdre Nansen McCloskey’s why liberalism works: how true Liberal values produce a freer, more equal, prosperous world for all   pp. 95-103 Douglas B. Rasmussen and Douglas J. Den UylDavid M. Levy and Sandra J. Peart, Towards and Economics of Natural Equals: A Documentary History of the Early Virginia School, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. xvi + 292 pages. 110.00 USD (hardback)   pp. 105-108 Steven G. MedemaJohn Kay and Mervyn King, Radical Uncertainty: Decision-Making Beyond the Numbers, London: W.W. Norton & Company, 2020. xvi + 528 Pages. 30.00 USD (hardback)   pp. 109-112 Anthony EvansChristopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall, Manufacturing Militarism: U.S. Government Propaganda in the War on Terror, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2021. xiv + 248 Pages. 26.00 USD (paperback)   pp. 113-116 Thomas K. Duncan |  |  |  |  |