The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought
1997 - 2025
Current editor(s): José Luís Cardoso From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 29, issue 6, 2022
- Introduction pp. 1003-1007

- Stefan Kolev, Nikolay Nenovsky, Pencho Penchev and Hans-Michael Trautwein
- “esclave né de quiconque l’achète”. The multiple histories of economic texts pp. 1008-1021

- Richard van den Berg
- Justice and charity: the role of Aristotelianism and Anglicanism in Edmund Burke’s Thoughts and Details on Scarcity pp. 1022-1041

- Ioannes P. Chountis
- Yuli Zhukovsky’s contribution to Russian debates on economic development of the 1860s–70s pp. 1042-1051

- Anton Galeev
- Irving Fisher, Simon Newcomb, and their plans to stabilize the dollar pp. 1052-1065

- Robert Dimand and Sofia Valeonti
- Edgar Sydenstricker, a pioneer of health economics pp. 1066-1088

- Philip Clarke and Guido Erreygers
- Polanyi and Schumpeter: Transitional processes via societal spheres pp. 1089-1110

- Theresa Hager, Ines Heck and Johanna Rath
- Economic theory and philosophical anthropology: Marx, Gramsci, Sraffa and the study of human nature pp. 1111-1124

- Alessandro Le Donne
- On the shoulders of giants: from Lange (1934) to Samuelson (1938) on the “unique” measure of utility pp. 1125-1145

- Amélie Fiévet
- Rupture and continuity in the original divide between microdynamics and macrodynamics pp. 1146-1164

- Vincent Carret
- Monetary non-neutrality and stabilisation policies 50 years after Lucas’s “expectations” paper: a roundtable discussion pp. 1165-1189

- Olivier Blanchard, Beatrice Cherrier, Pierrick Clerc, David Laidler, Athanasios Orphanides and Hans-Michael Trautwein
- Axel Leijonhufvud (1933–2022) pp. 1190-1194

- Hans-Michael Trautwein
- Allyn Abbott Young pp. 1195-1197

- Samuel Demeulemeester
- Early utilitarians. Lives and ideals pp. 1197-1199

- Virginie Gouverneur
- Ökonomisches Denken in drei Jahrhunderten pp. 1199-1202

- Heinz Rieter
Volume 29, issue 5, 2022
- Introduction: roundabout ways of looking at Menger’s modernity pp. 781-787

- Sandye Gloria, Ludovic Ragni and Richard Sturn
- Menger and contemporary Austrian economics: knowledge, institutions and liberalism pp. 788-800

- Peter J. Boettke
- Time, uncertainty and knowledge: the foundations and the modernity of Carl Menger’s contribution pp. 801-816

- Richard Arena
- Carl Menger on time and entrepreneurship pp. 817-835

- Gilles Campagnolo
- Monetary theory and policy: the difficult relationship of Menger’s theory of money and his positions on currency reform and monetary policy pp. 836-854

- Guenther Chaloupek
- The monetary theories of Carl Menger and Friedrich von Wieser: a comparative study pp. 855-876

- Karl-Friedrich Israel
- Re-reading Carl Menger’s Grundsätze – another book that “cries out to be surpassed”* pp. 877-919

- Heinz D. Kurz
- Menger and the continental epistemology of uncertainty pp. 920-937

- Stefano Solari
- The Mengers versus Mises on matters methodological pp. 938-966

- Scott Scheall
- On the modernity of Carl Menger: criss-cross views. Roundtable conversation* pp. 967-992

- Gilles Campagnolo, Sandye Gloria, Heinz Kurz and Richard Sturn
- Trade and nation: how companies and politics reshaped economic thought pp. 993-994

- John Shovlin
- Microeconomics for the critical mind. Mainstream and heterodox analyses pp. 995-998

- Heinz D. Kurz
- Thomas Aquinas and the civil economy tradition: the Mediterranean spirit of capitalism pp. 998-1001

- Pierre Januard
Volume 29, issue 4, 2022
- The Sympathy of Sophie de Grouchy, translator and critic of Adam Smith pp. 579-599

- Simona Pisanelli
- Economic method, public policy, and society: Adolph Lowe’s political economics pp. 600-618

- Michael J. Murray
- Money is a right: Alfred Lansburgh’s Token Theory of Money pp. 619-647

- Jan Greitens
- Timing the laws: Rousseau’s theory of development in Corsica pp. 648-679

- Hansong Li
- Rise of the Kniesians: the professor-student network of Nobel laureates in economics pp. 680-703

- Richard Tol
- Locke, Marshall, and Knight, on uncertainty and risk pp. 704-728

- Stephen John Nash and Liza Joan Rybak
- Risky exchanges: price and justice in Thomas Aquinas’s De emptione et venditione ad tempus pp. 729-769

- Pierre Januard
- Robert Triffin: a life pp. 770-772

- Pierre-Hernan Rojas
- The Routledge guidebook to Smith’s wealth of nations pp. 772-774

- Jeffrey T. Young
- The dynamics of poverty. Circular, cumulative causation, value judgments, institutions and social engineering in the world of Gunnar Myrdal pp. 774-776

- Michele Alacevich
- The emergence of Arthur Laffer: the foundations of supply-side economics in Chicago and Washington, 1966-1976 pp. 776-777

- Molly Michelmore
- Jacqueline Hecht (1932–2020) pp. 778-780

- Antoin Murphy
Volume 29, issue 3, 2022
- Forty years of behavioral economics pp. 393-437

- Alexandre Truc
- Decision over Time as a By-Product of a Measure of Utility: A Reappraisal of Paul Samuelson’s “A Note on Measurement of Utility” (1937) pp. 438-454

- Amélie Fiévet
- The importance of multiple equilibria for economic policy in Jan Tinbergen’s early works pp. 455-479

- Michaël Assous and Vincent Carret
- The legacy of Chester I. Barnard in the science of organization of Oliver E. Williamson pp. 480-504

- Virgile Chassagnon, Bernard Baudry and Naciba Haned
- The evolution of Patinkin’s interpretation of Keynes’ principle of effective demand pp. 505-522

- Jochen Hartwig
- Police of individual interests against police of good order: Herbert’s Essay on the general police of grain as an attack on Delamare’s Treatise on the police pp. 523-547

- Jean-Daniel Boyer
- The other invisible hand. The social and economic effects of theodicy in Vico and Genovesi pp. 548-566

- Luigino Bruni and Paolo Santori
- Jan Tinbergen (1903–1944) and the rise of economic expertise pp. 567-569

- Ariane Dupont-Kieffer
- Welfare theory, public action, and ethical values: revisiting the history of welfare economics pp. 569-572

- Matthew D. Adler
- The emergence of capitalism in early America pp. 572-574

- Keith Tribe
- A reflection on Sraffa’s revolution in economic theory pp. 575-577

- Paolo Trabucchi
Volume 29, issue 2, 2022
- Beyond the Sonderweg: defining political economy in 19th-century Germany pp. 197-217

- Luiz Felipe Bruzzi Curi and Ian Coelho de Souza Almeida
- Discipline or international balance: the choice of monetary systems in Europe pp. 218-245

- Jonas Ljungberg and Anders Ögren
- Wilhelm Lautenbach’s credit mechanics – a precursor to the current money supply debate pp. 246-270

- Frank Decker and Charles A. E. Goodhart
- Absolute advantages and capital mobility in international trade theory pp. 271-293

- Enrico Bellino and Saverio Fratini
- Substitutability and the quest for stability pp. 294-328

- Jean-Sébastien Lenfant
- Robert Torrens and the dynamics of wages in a growing economy pp. 329-348

- Christophe Depoortère
- The dual context of Keynes’ International Clearing Union: theoretical advances meet history pp. 349-368

- Adrien Faudot
- Cyclical stagnation: the continental contribution to Alvin Hansen’s stagnation thesis pp. 369-386

- A. Reeves Johnson
- Jérôme de Boyer des Roches (1954–2020) pp. 387-388

- Gilbert Faccarello
- An introduction to the history of economic thought in Central Europe pp. 389-391

- Oleg Ananyin
- Women’s economic thought in the romantic age: towards a transdisciplinary herstory of economic thought pp. 391-392

- Catherine Packham
Volume 29, issue 1, 2022
- The first appearances of Quesnay in German: about Sinophilia, Sweden and the politics of physiocracy pp. 1-20

- Gabriel Sabbagh
- Friedrich von Wieser on labour pp. 21-39

- Motohiro Okada
- Resolving a seeming paradox in Adam Smith’s study of history with regard to inference to the best explanation pp. 40-60

- Kwangsu Kim
- “I profess to have made no discovery”. James Mill on comparative advantage pp. 61-81

- Gilbert Faccarello
- Rethinking Burke and Smith: political economy and foundations of industry pp. 82-103

- Sora Sato
- Lexicographic preferences in Pascal’s Wager pp. 104-111

- Pavlo Blavatskyy
- Oligopoly, mutual dependence and tacit collusion: the emergence of industrial organisation and the reappraisal of American capitalism at Harvard (1933–1952) pp. 112-145

- Alexandre Chirat and Thibault Guicherd
- Becoming paradigmatic: the strategic uses of narratives in behavioral economics pp. 146-168

- Alexandre Truc
- Great Economic Thinkers from Antiquity to the Historical School pp. 169-185

- Hans-Michael Trautwein
- The economic thought of Michael Polanyi pp. 186-188

- Peter J. Boettke
- The nature and method of economic science: evidence, causality, and ends pp. 188-190

- Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay
- Who’s Afraid of the MPS? A Review Essay pp. 191-195

- Philip Mirowski
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