1997 Litt. D., University of Cambridge
1995 M.A., University of Cambridge
1974 M.A. (Economics), with distinction, University of Manchester
1971 Graduate Certificate in Education, with distinction, University of London (external)
1968 B.Sc. (Mathematics and Philosophy), University of Manchester
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Clarence E. Ayres Visiting Scholar award for 1990, Association for Evolutionary Economics Meeting, Washington DC, USA.
University of Cambridge discretionary salary payment 1994-98.
Ranked by a panel of 80 Japanese academic economists, on the basis of published books, as one of the 23 currently most important economists of all time and one of the top 17 living economists in the world. The ranking was organised by the Japanese business journal The Diamond Weekly (circulation approximately 100,000) and the results were published in its issue of 20 December 1997.
‘Citation of Excellence, Highest Quality Rating’ by Anbar Electronic Intelligence, for article on ‘Evolutionary and Competence-Based Theories of the Firm’, in Journal of Economic Studies, March 1998.
‘The Approach of Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Literature, March 1998, was cited as ‘Article of the Month’, in the French language journal Alternatives Economiques, November 1998.
Listed in Who’s Who in Economics (3rd edn., Edward Elgar, 1999) - citation based.
Current
In the 1980s additional research interests were developed in the theory of the firm, the economics of worker participation, the economics of planning, the theory of economic systems, expectations and information in economic theory, the economic consequences of democracy, the economics of institutions, and the long-term causes of economic growth. Again, all these concerns are reflected in publications.
Have carried out theoretical research work on the economic efficiency of cooperative and participatory firms for the United Nations University, World Institute for Development Economics Research.
The economic theorists that have most influenced my thinking are John Maynard Keynes, Karl Marx, Joan Robinson, G. L. S. Shackle, Herbert Simon and Thorstein Veblen.
Books - Sole Author
8. Economics and Utopia: Why the Learning Economy is Not the End of History, Routledge, London, 1999.
7. Economics and Evolution: Bringing Life Back into Economics, Polity Press, Cambridge and University of Michigan Press, 1993. (Also in Spanish and Portuguese editions.)
6. After Marx and Sraffa: Essays in Political Economy, Macmillan Press, London, 1991.
5. Economics and Institutions: A Manifesto for a Modern Institutional Economics, Polity Press, Cambridge, and University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1988. (Also in Chinese, Italian, Japanese and Portuguese editions.)
4. The Democratic Economy: A New Look at Planning, Markets and Power, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1984.
3. Capitalism, Value and Exploitation, Martin Robertson, Oxford, 1982.
2. Labour at the Crossroads, Martin Robertson, Oxford, 1981.
1. Socialism and Parliamentary Democracy, Spokesman, Nottingham, 1977. (Also in Italian, Spanish, Turkish and Japanese editions.)
5. The Foundations of Evolutionary Economics: 1890-1973, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 1998.
4. Economics and Biology, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1995.
3. The Elgar Companion to Institutional and Evolutionary Economics (edited with W. J. Samuels and M. R. Tool) Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.
2. The Economics of Institutions, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1993.
1. Rethinking Economics (edited with E. Screpanti), Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1991.
55. ‘Socialism Against Markets? A Critique of Two Recent Proposals’, Economy and Society, 27(4), November 1998, pp. 450-76.
54. ‘On the Evolution of Thorstein Veblen’s Evolutionary Economics’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 22(3), July 1998, pp. 415-31.
53. ‘Competence and Contract in the Theory of the Firm’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 35(2), April 1998, pp. 179-201.
52. ‘The Approach of Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Literature, 36(1), March 1998, pp. 166-92.
51. ‘Evolutionary and Competence-Based Theories of the Firm’, Journal of Economic Studies, 25(1), 1998, pp. 25-56.
50. ‘The Evolution of Capitalism from the Perspective of Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’ (in Japanese), The Keizai Seminar, no. 516, January 1998, pp. 64-72. (The Keizai Seminar has a circulation of about 10,000 in Japan.)
49. ‘Economics and the Return to Mecca: The Recognition of Novelty and Emergence’, Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 8, 1997, pp. 399-412..
48. ‘What Lies Beyond Capitalism?’ (review article), International Review of Applied Economics, 11(3), 1997, pp. 491-5.
47. ‘The Ubiquity of Habits and Rules’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 21(6), November 1997, pp. 663-84.
46. ‘The Evolutionary and Non-Darwinian Economics of Joseph Schumpeter’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 7(2), June 1997, pp. 131-45.
45. ‘The Challenge of Evolutionary Economics’, Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 152(4), 1996, pp. 697-706.
44. ‘An Evolutionary Theory of Long-Term Economic Growth’, International Studies Quarterly, 40, 1996, pp. 393-410.
43. ‘Varieties of Capitalism and Varieties of Economic Theory’, Review of International Political Economy, 3(3), Autumn 1996, pp. 381-434.
42. ‘The Evolution of Evolutionary Economics’, Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 42(4), November 1995, pp. 469-88.
41. ‘The Political Economy of Utopia’, Review of Social Economy, 53(2), Summer 1995, pp. 195-213.
40. ‘Varieties of Capitalism from the Perspectives of Veblen and Marx’, Journal of Economic Issues, 29(2), June 1995, pp. 575-84.
39. ‘The State, Money, and Spontaneous Order’ (a review essay on S. Horwitz, Monetary Evolution, Free Banking, and Economic Order), Critical Review, 8(4), Fall 1994, pp. 579-89.
38. ‘The Evolution of Socio-Economic Order in the Move to a Market Economy’, Review of International Political Economy, 1(3), Autumn, 1994, pp. 387-404.
37. ‘Optimisation and Evolution: Winter’s Critique of Friedman Revisited’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 18(4), August 1994, pp. 413-30.
36. ‘Some Remarks on “Economic Imperialism” and International Political Economy’, Review of International Political Economy, 1(1), Spring 1994, pp. 21-8.
35. ‘Why the Problem of Reductionism in Biology has Implications for Economics’, World Futures, 37(2-3), 1993, pp. 69-90.
34. ‘Theories of Economic Evolution: A Preliminary Taxonomy’, The Manchester School of Economic and Social Studies, 61(2), June 1993, pp. 125-43.
33. ‘The Economy as An Organism - Not a Machine’, Futures, 25(4), May 1993, pp. 392-403.
32. ‘The Mecca of Alfred Marshall’, The Economic Journal, 103(2), March 1993, pp. 406-15.
31. ‘Institutional Economics: Surveying the “Old” and the “New”‘, Metroeconomica, 44(1), February 1993, pp. 1-28.
30. ‘Marx, Engels, and Economic Evolution’, International Journal of Social Economics, 19, 1992, pp. 121-8.
29. ‘Carl Menger’s Theory of the Evolution of Money: Some Problems’, Review of Political Economy, 4(4), October 1992, pp. 396-412.
28. ‘Thorstein Veblen and Post-Darwinian Economics’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 16(3), September 1992, pp. 285-301.
27. ‘The Reconstruction of Economics: Is There Still a Place for Neoclassical Theory?’, Journal of Economic Issues, 26(3), September 1992, pp 749-67.
26. ‘Economic Evolution: Intervention Contra Pangloss’, Journal of Economic Issues, 25(2), June 1991, pp. 519-33.
25. ‘Hayek’s Theory of Cultural Evolution: An Evaluation in the Light of Vanberg’s Critique’, Economics and Philosophy, 7(1), April 1991, pp. 67-82.
24. ‘Institutional Economic Theory: The Old Versus the New’, Review of Political Economy, November 1989.
23. (With Derek C. Jones) ‘Codetermination: A Partial Review of Theory and Evidence’, Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics, 1989.
22. ‘Economic Pluralism and Self-Management’, (Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labour Managed Firms, Vol. 2, 1987) Czech translation published in Informacni Zpravodaj, 1(4), 1989.
21. ‘Institutional Rigidities and Economic Growth’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 13(1), March 1989, pp. 79-101.
20. ‘Economic Pluralism and Self-Management’, in D. C. Jones and J. Svejnar (eds), Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labour Managed Firms, Vol. 2, 1987.
19. ‘Economics and Systems Theory’, Journal of Economic Studies, 14(4), 1987.
18. ‘Behind Methodological Individualism’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 10(3), September 1986.
17. ‘The Rationalist Conception of Action’, Journal of Economic Issues, 19(4), December 1985.
16. ‘Worker Participation and Macroeconomic Efficiency’, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Winter 1982-83.
15. ‘Theoretical and Policy Implications of Variable Productivity’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 6(3), September 1982.
14. ‘Marx Without the Labour Theory of Value’, Review of Radical Political Economics, Summer 1982.
13. ‘On the Political Economy of the Socialist Transformation’, New Left Review, No. 133, May-June 1982.
12. ‘Money and the Sraffa System’, Australian Economic Papers, June 1981.
11. ‘On Exploitation and Labor-Value’, Science and Society, Summer 1981.
10. ‘A Theory of Exploitation Without the Labour Theory of Value’, Science and Society, Fall 1980.
9. ‘The Theory of the Falling Rate of Profit’ (from New Left Review, No. 84, March-April 1974) translation published in En Teoria (Madrid), No. 1, April-June 1979.
8. ‘Om Grundlaget for en Teori om Kapitalistic Udbytning’, Nordisk Tidskrift for Politisk Ekonomi (Nordic Review of Political Economy), No. 6, 1978.
7. ‘Papering Over the Cracks: Comments on Fine and Harris’ Survey of the Current Controversy within Marxian Economics’, Socialist Register, 1977.
6. ‘Sraffa, Value and Distribution’, British Review of Economic Issues, No.1, November 1977.
5. (With I. Steedman) ‘Depreciation of Machines of Changing Efficiency: A Note’, Australian Economic Papers, June 1977.
4. ‘Exploitation and Embodied Labour Time’, Bulletin of the Conference of Socialist Economists, March 1976.
3. ‘Fixed Capital and Value Analysis’ (with I. Steedman), Bulletin of the Conference of Socialist Economists, June 1975.
2. ‘Marxian Epistemology and the Transformation Problem’, Economy and Society, November 1974.
1. ‘The Theory of the Falling Rate of Profit’, New Left Review, No. 84, March-April 1974.
6. ‘Ernest Mandel: 1923-1995’, Economic Journal, 107(1), January 1997, pp. 159-64.
5. ‘Some Responses to Jennings and Waller’, Journal of Economic Issues, 30(4), December 1996, pp. 1163-8.
4. ‘Land, Learning and the Nature of Spatiality’, Environment and Planning A, 28(11), November 1996, pp. 1940-42.
3. ‘Economics and Evolution: A Reply to Lawrence Moss’, Marshall Studies Bulletin, 5, 1995, pp. 41-50.
2. ‘A Response to Robert E. Lane’, Journal of Economic Issues, September 1993.
1. ‘On Informational Reductionism: A Reply to Kay’, Journal of Economic Issues, March 1988.
56. ‘Decomposition and Growth: Biological Metaphors in Economics from the 1880s to the 1980s’, for K. Dopfer (ed.), Evolutionary Principles of Economics, Kluwer, Boston (forthcoming).
55. ‘Shackle and Institutional Economics: Some Bridges and Barriers’, in P. Earl (ed.), Essays in Honour of G. L. S. Shackle, Routledge, London (forthcoming).
54. ‘Towards a Radical Political Economy’, in Academic Staff College of India (ed.), Readings in Political Economy, Orient Longman, Hyderabad, (forthcoming). [Extract from Capitalism, Value and Exploitation.]
53. ‘The Evolution of Capitalism from the Perspective of Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’, in N. Yokokawa, M. Noguchi and M. Itoh (eds) Capitalism in Evolution (in Japanese).
52. ‘Some Possible Differences Between American and European Institutionalism’, in D. James and J. Mogab (eds) (1998) Technology, Innovation, and Industrial Economics: Institutionalist Perspectives, Boston, Kluwer, pp. 127-46.
51. ‘Veblen’s Theory of the Leisure Class and the Genesis of Evolutionary Economics’, in Warren J. Samuels (ed.) (1998) The Founding of Evolutionary Economics (London: Routledge), pp. 170-200.
50. ‘Dichotimizing the Dichotomy: Veblen versus Ayres’ in S. Fayazmanesh and M. Tool (eds) (1998) Institutionalist Method and Value, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 48-73.
49. ‘Varieties of Capitalism and Varieties of Economic Theory’, in K. Nielsen and B. Johnson (eds) Institutions and Economic Change: New Perspectives on Markets, Firms and Technology, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 1998, pp. 215-42.
48. ‘Institutional Economic Theory: The Old Versus the New’, Review of Political Economy, November 1989. Reprinted in David L. Prychitko (ed.) (1998) Why Economists Disagree: An Introduction to Alternative Schools of Thought, Albany: State University of New York Press, pp. 155-77.
47. ‘The Coasean Tangle: The Nature of the Firm and the Problem of Historical Specificity’, in S. G. Medema (ed.) (1998), Coasean Economics: Law and Economics and the New Institutional Economics, Kluwer: Boston, pp. 23-49.
46. ‘The Mecca of Alfred Marshall’, The Economic Journal, March 1993. Reprinted in J. Cunningham Wood (ed.), Alfred Marshall’s Economics, Critical Assessments (Supplement), Blackwell, Oxford.
45. ‘Economics and Evolution and the Evolution of Economics’, in J. Reijnders (ed.) Economics and Evolution, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 1997, pp. 9-40.
44. ‘Biology and Economics’ in P. Weingart, S. D. Mitchell, P. J. Richerson and S. Maasen (eds), Human By Nature: Between Biology and the Social Sciences, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ, 1997, pp. 47-51.
43. ‘Institutionalismus: Nationale Schulen oder internationale Str?mungen?’ [‘Institutionalism: National Schools or International Movement?’] in Schefold, Bertram (ed.) (1997) Vademucum zu einen klassiker des Skandinavischen Institutionalismus: Johan ?kerman ‘Das Problem der sozial?konomischen Synthese’ (D?sseldorf: Verlag Wirtschaft und Finanzen), pp. 109-29.
42. ‘Economics, Environmental Policy and the Transcendence of Utilitarianism’ in Foster, John (ed.) (1997) Valuing Nature? Ethics, Economics and the Environment (London: Routledge), pp. 48-63.
41. ‘The Fate of the Cambridge Capital Controversy’, in P. Arestis and M. C. Sawyer (eds) Capital Controversy, Post Keynesian Economics and the History of Economics: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt, London, Routledge, 1997, pp. 95-110.
40. ‘Metaphor and Pluralism in Economics: Mechanics and Biology’, in A. Salanti and E. Screpanti (eds) Pluralism in Economics: New Perspectives in History and Methodology, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1997, pp. 131-54.
39. ‘Towards a Worthwhile Economics’, in S. G. Medema and W. J. Samuels (eds) How Economists Should Do Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1996, pp. 103-21.
38. ‘Richard Nelson and Sidney Winter’, in W. J. Samuels (ed) American Economists of the Late Twentieth Century, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1996, pp. 194-215.
37. ‘Organizational Form and Economic Evolution: A Critique of the Williamsonian Hypothesis’, in U. Pagano and R. E. Rowthorn (eds), Democracy and Efficiency in Economic Enterprises, Routledge, London, 1996, pp. 98-115.
36. ‘Corporate Culture and the Nature of the Firm’ in John Groenewegen (ed.), Transaction Cost Economics and Beyond, Kluwer, Boston, 1996, pp. 249-69.
35. ‘Biological and Physical Metaphors in Economics’, in Biology as Society, Society as Biology: Metaphors. Sociology of the Sciences Yearbook 1994, Kluwer, Boston, 1995, pp. 339-56.
34. ‘Introduction’, in G. Hodgson (ed.), Economics and Biology, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1995.
33. ‘Marxism Without Tears: A Review of Roemer’s “Free to Lose”’, from Review of Social Economy, Winter, 1989, reprinted in J. Cunningham Wood (ed.), Karl Marx’s Economics, Critical Assessments, Second Series, Routledge, London.
32. ‘Hayek, Evolution, and Spontaneous Order’, in, P. Mirowski (ed.), Natural Images in Economic Thought: Markets Read in Tooth and Claw, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994, pp. 408-47.
31. ‘A Comment on Pasinetti’, in R. Delorme and K. Dopfer (eds), The Political Economy of Diversity: Evolutionary Perspectives on Economic Order and Disorder, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994, pp. 46-50.
30. ‘The Return of Institutional Economics’, in N. Smelser and R. Swedberg (eds), Handbook of Economic Sociology, Princeton University Press, 1994, pp. 58-76.
29. ‘Precursors of Modern Evolutionary Economics: Marx, Marshall, Veblen, and Schumpeter’, in R. England (ed.), Evolutionary Concepts in Contemporary Economics, University of Michigan Press, 1994, pp. 9-35.
28. ‘Introduction’, in G. Hodgson (ed.), The Economics of Institutions, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1993.
27. ‘Transaction Costs and the Evolution of the Firm’, in C. Pitelis (ed.), Transaction Costs, Markets and Hierarchies: Critical Assessments, Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1993, pp. 77-100.
26. ‘Commentary’ on ‘The Methodology of Institutional Economics: A Pragmatic Instrumentalist Perspective’ by Paul D. Bush, in M. Tool (ed.) Institutional Economics:Theory, Method, Policy, Kluwer, Boston, 1993.
25. ‘Evolution and Institutional Change’, in B. Gustafsson, C. Knudsen and U. M?ki (eds), Rationality, Institutions and Economic Methodology, Routledge, London, 1993, pp. 222-41.
24. ‘Calculation, Habits and Action’, in W. Gerrard (ed.), Rationality and Economics, Routledge, London, 1993, 36-51.
23. ‘Commodity Variation and the Evolution of Money: A Place for the State?’ in W. Blaas and J. Foster (eds) Mixed Economies in Europe Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1993, pp. 17-32.
22. ‘Institutional Evolution and Methodological Individualism: A Comment on Richard N. Langlois “Orders and Organizations”‘, in S. Boehm and B. J. Caldwell (eds), Austrian Economics: Tensions and New Directions, Kluwer, Boston, 1992, pp. 165-92.
21. ‘Rationality and the Influence of Institutions’, in P. Ekins and M. Max-Neef (eds), Real Life Economics, Routledge, London, 1992, pp. 40-48.
20. ‘Institutional Economics: Legacy and New Directions’, in U. Himmelstrand (ed.), Interfaces in Economic and Social Analysis, Routledge, London, 1992, pp. 124-39.
19. ‘Evolution and Intention in Economic Theory’, in P. P. Saviotti and J. S. Metcalfe (eds), Evolutionary Theories of Economic and Technological Change, Harwood Academic Publishers, Reading, 1991.
18. ‘Introduction’ (with E. Screpanti), in G. Hodgson and E. Screpanti (eds), Rethinking Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1991.
17. ‘Socio-Political Disruption and Economic Development’, in G. Hodgson and E. Screpanti (eds), Rethinking Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1991.
16. ‘Marx After Robinson: An Essay on the Distinction Between Production and Exchange and Related Matters’, in I. Rima (ed.) The Joan Robinson Legacy, Sharpe, New York 1991.
15. ‘A Theory of Exploitation Without the Labour Theory of Value’, (from Science and Society, Fall 1980) reprinted in J. E. King (ed.), Marxian Economics, vol. 2, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1990.
14. ‘Institutional Rigidities and Economic Growth’ (from Cambridge Journal of Economics, March 1989) reprinted in A. Lawson, J. G. Palma and J. Sender (eds) Kaldor’s Political Economy, Academic Press, London, 1989.
13. ‘Post Keynesianism and Institutionalism: The Missing Link’, in J. Pheby (ed.), New Directions in Post Keynesian Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1989.
12. ‘The Rationalist Conception of Action’ (from Journal of Economic Issues, December 1985) reprinted in M. R. Tool and W. J. Samuels (eds.) The Methodology of Economic Thought, Transaction, New Brunswick, 1989.
11. ‘Depreciation of Machines of Changing Efficiency: A Note’ (with I. Steedman), (from Australian Economic Papers, June 1977) in I. Steedman (ed.), Sraffian Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1988.
10. ‘The British Experience’, in E. Nell, Prosperity and Public Spending, Unwin Hyman, Boston, 1988.
9. ‘Marx Without the Labour Theory of Value’, Review of Radical Political Economics, September 1982. Reprinted in J. C. Wood (ed.) Karl Marx’s Economics: Critical Assessments, Croom Helm, Beckenham, 1987.
8. ‘The Limits to Keynes’, in P. Nolan and S. Paine (eds) Rethinking Socialist Economics: A New Agenda for Britain, Polity Press, Cambridge, 1986.
7. ‘The Underlying Economic Crisis’, in D. Coates and J. Hillard (eds), The Economic Decline of Modern Britain, Wheatsheaf, Brighton, 1986. [Extract from Labour at the Crossroads.]
6. ‘Persuasion, Expectations and the Limits to Keynes’, in T. Lawson and H. Pesaran (eds), Keynes’ Economics: Methodological Issues, Croom Helm, London, 1985.
5. ‘Thatcherism: The Miracle that Never Happened’, in E. Nell (ed.), Free Market Conservatism, George Allen and Unwin, Hemel Hempstead, 1984.
4. ‘On the Political Preconditions of the Alternative Economic Strategy’, in M. Prior (ed.), The Popular and the Political, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1981.
3. ‘Labour and Profits’, in I. Steedman, P. Sweezy, et al, The Value Controversy, Verso, London, 1981.
2. ‘Framvaxten av en Alternativ Ekonomisk Strategi i England’, in P. Dencik (ed.) Vanstern och den Ekonomiska Politiken, Arbetarkultur, Stockholm, 1981.
1. ‘The Theory of the Falling Rate of Profit’ (from New Left Review, No. 84, March-April 1974) translation published in E. Screpanti and M. Zenezini (eds) Accumulazione del capitale e progresso tecnico, Feltrinelli, Milano, 1978.
33-38. ‘Bioeconomics’; ‘The European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy (EAEPE)’; ‘Evolutionary Economics, History of’; ‘Evolutionary Economics, Major Contemporary Themes’; ‘Institutions and Habits’; and ‘Knowledge, Information, Technology and Change’ in P. O’Hara (ed.) Encyclopedia of Political Economy, Routledge, London, 1999.
32. ‘Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’ in the Enciclopedia Italiana (forthcoming).
29-31. ‘Emergence’; ‘Evolutionary Economics’; and ‘Selectionist Arguments’ in J. Davis, W. Hands and U. M?ki (eds) Elgar Companion to Economic Methodology, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 1998.
28. ‘Evolutionary Theories of the Firm’; in the The IEBM Handbook of Organizational Behavior, International Thompson Business Press, London, 1997.
24-27. ‘Evolutionary Theories of the Firm’; ‘Institutional Economics’; ‘Veblen, Thorstein’; and ‘Williamson, Oliver’ in the International Encyclopedia of Business and Management, Routledge, London, 1996.
23. ‘Cooperation, the Evolution of’ (with R. Axelrod) in The Elgar Companion to Institutional and Evolutionary Economics (edited by G. M. Hodgson, W. J. Samuels and M. R. Tool) Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.
22. ‘Inflation’ (with W. Samuels) in The Elgar Companion to Institutional and Evolutionary Economics (edited by G. M. Hodgson, W. J. Samuels and M. R. Tool) Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.
21. ‘Marx, Karl’ (with W. Samuels) in The Elgar Companion to Institutional and Evolutionary Economics (edited by G. M. Hodgson, W. J. Samuels and M. R. Tool) Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.
3-20. ‘Capital Theory’; ‘Cognition, Cultural and Institutional Influences On’; ‘Darwinism, Influence of Economics on’; ‘Determinism and Free Will’; ‘Evolution and Optimality’; ‘Evolution, Theories of Economic’; ‘Habits’; ‘Institutional Economic Thought in Europe’; ‘Institutionalism, “New” and “Old”’; ‘Lock-in and Chreodic Development’; ‘Methodological Individualism’; ‘Money, Evolution of’; ‘Nelson, Richard R.’; ‘Neoclassical Microeconomic Theory, Critique of’; ‘Natural Selection, Economic Evolution and’; ‘Schotter, Andrew’; ‘Selection, Unit of Evolutionary’; ‘Winter, Sidney G.’; all in The Elgar Companion to Institutional and Evolutionary Economics (edited by G. M. Hodgson, W. J. Samuels and M. R. Tool) Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.
2. ‘Employment Relations and Contracts’, in P. Arestis and M. C. Sawyer (eds) The Elgar Companion to Radical Political Economy, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.
1. ‘Karl Polanyi’, in P. Arestis and M. C. Sawyer (eds), Bibliographical Dictionary of Dissenting Economists, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1992.
2. Video presentation on institutional economics, Japanese University of the Air, 1993.
1. ‘Mrs Thatcher’s Economic Experiment’ (with Patrick Minford) audiotape, Anforme Publishers, 1986.
Invited Seminar Papers Given:
BELGIUM: Louvain Catholic University, 1988.
COLOMBIA: National University of Colombia, Bogata, 1999.
CZECH REPUBLIC: Long-Term Forecasting Institute of the Czech Republic, Prague, 1990.
DENMARK: Aalborg University, 1987, 1991; Aarhus University, 1976; Copenhagen Business School, 1987, 1994, 1998; Copenhagen University, 1976, 1987; Odense University, 1998; Roskilde University, 1987, 1991, 1998.
FINLAND: University of Helsinki, 1991.
GERMANY: University of Hamburg, 1996; Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin f?r Sozialforschung (Berlin Social Science Research Centre), 1988, 1995.
GREECE: Panteion University, Athens, 1996.
IRELAND: Trinity College, University of Dublin, 1983.
ITALY: University of Florence, 1989.
JAPAN: Hitotsubashi University, 1997, Hokkaido University, 1997; Kansai University, 1997; Kyoto University, 1997; Kyushu University, 1997; Kwansei Gakuin University, 1997; Musashi University, 1997, 1998; Nagoya University, 1997; Osaka City University, 1997; Rikkyo University, 1997; Ritsumeikan University, 1998; Tokyo University, 1997, 1998.
THE NETHERLANDS: Netherlands Universities’ Joint Social Research Centre (SISWO), 1988; University of Amsterdam, 1994; Erasmus University Rotterdam, 1995, 1999.
NORWAY: University of Oslo, 1991.
POLAND: Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw 1992; Krakow Academy of Economics, 1992.
PORTUGAL: University of Lisbon, 1998.
SWEDEN: Industrial Institute for Economic and Social Research, Stockholm, 1991; Link?ping University, 1991; Royal Institute of Technology, 1991; Stockholm School of Economics, 1991; Stockholm University, 1991; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, 1991; Uppsala University, 1991.
UNITED KINGDOM: Aberdeen University, 1994; Birkbeck College, 1976; Bradford University, 1995; Brunel University, 1983; Cambridge University, 1988, 1999; Central England University, 1984, 1986, 1988, 1990; Central Lancashire University, 1983; De Montfort University, 1990; Demos, 1994; ESRC Political Economy Seminar, 1985; ESRC Post Keynesian Study Group Seminar, 1991; Edinburgh University, 1984; Glasgow Caledonian University, 1995; Greenwich University, 1998; Hertfordshire University, 1993; Keele University - Staffordshire University, 1988; Lancaster University, 1993, 1994; Leeds University, 1998; London School of Economics, 1998; Manchester University, 1994; Middlesex University, 1987; Newcastle University, 1982, 1983; East London University, 1978; Open University, 1986, 1992; Oxford University, 1976; Sheffield University, 1995; Stirling University, 1993; Strathclyde University, 1994; Surrey University, 1994; Sussex University, 1993, 1994; Swansea University, 1991; Trent University, 1987; Warwick University, 1984; York University, 1990.
UNITED STATES: University of Massachusetts at Amherst, 1978, 1981; New School for Social Research, 1978, 1981; New York State University at Oneonta, 1978; Notre Dame University, 1996; Rutgers University, 1981; State University of California at Sacramento, 1989; University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1989; Yale University, 1978.
International Conference on ‘Institutions in Transition’ (keynote speaker), Institute of Macroeconomic Analysis and Development, Bled, Slovenia, 24-26 September 1998.
Development Studies Association Summer School, University of Bradford, 7-8 September 1998.
Norwegian School of Management, ‘Thorstein Veblen Conference on Institutional Analysis of the Economy Today’ (keynote speaker) in Oslo, 18-19 June 1998.
Japan Association for Evolutionary Economics, annual conference (keynote speaker) in Tokyo, Japan, 28-29 March 1998.
International Seminar on ‘Institutions and Economic Development: A Comparative Perspective on the Reform of the State’, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 12-14 November 1997.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘Institutions, Economic Integration and Restructuring’, Panteion University, Athens, Greece, 7-9 November 1997.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘Work, Unemployment and Need: Theory, Evidence, Policies’, University of Antwerp, Belgium, 8-10 November 1996.
University of Paris I (Sorbonne), colloquium on evolutionary economics, 20 September 1996.
Thorstein Veblen Society, Chicago USA, Seminar on Metaphors in Economics, 20 April 1996.
Belgian-Dutch Association for Post Keynesion Economics, conference on ‘Economics and Evolution’ (keynote speaker) in Utrecht, Netherlands, 10 November 1995.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘Transforming Economies and Societies: Towards an Institutional Theory of Economic Change’, Krakow, Poland, October 1995.
American Economic Association annual conference, Allied Social Science Association Meetings, Washington DC, USA, January 1995.
Association for Evolutionary Economics annual conference, Allied Social Science Association Meetings, Washington DC, USA, January 1995.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘Challenges to Institutional and Evolutionary Economic Theory: Growth, Uncertainty and Change’, Copenhagen, Denmark, October 1994.
Budapest University of Economic Sciences, European Association for Comparative Economic Systems conference on ‘The Transformation of Economic Systems’ (keynote speaker), Budapest, Hungary, September 1994.
Erasmus University Rotterdam, conference on ‘Transaction Costs and Beyond’, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, June 1994.
University of Bergamo, workshop on ‘Pluralism in Economics’, Bergamo, Italy, May 1994.
University of Washington, workshop on ‘Evolutionary Paradigms in the Social Sciences’, Seattle, Washington, USA, May 1994.
University of Lancaster, Centre for the Study of Environmental Change, seminar on ‘Value, Incommensurability and Economic Institutions’, Lancaster, UK, December 1993.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘The Economy of the Future: Ecology, Technology, Institutions’, Barcelona, Spain, October 1993.
Krakow Academy of Economics Conference on, ‘Transforming Post-Socialist Societies: Theoretical Perspectives and Future Prospects for Economic and Political Change in Europe’, Krakow, Poland, October 1993.
Russell Sage Foundation, Conference on ‘Economic Sociology’, New York, February 1993.
United Nations World Institute for Development Economics Research, Conference on ‘Participation and Cooperation in Economic Enterprises’, Cambridge, January 1993.
University of Bielefeld, Germany, conference on ‘The Transfer of Images and Metaphors between Biology and the Social Sciences’, May 1992.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘The Evolution of Mixed Economies: East and West’, Vienna, Austria, November 1991.
Charles Gide Association, conference entitled ‘Institutionalism in Question’, Marseilles, France, September 1991.
Malvern Political Economy Conference, Malvern, August 1991.
Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, Stockholm, June 1991.
Association for Evolutionary Economics, Allied Social Science Association Meetings, Washington DC, USA, December 1990.
European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘Rethinking Economics’, Florence, Italy, November 1990.
9th International Summer School of Advanced Economic Studies, Trieste, Italy, July 1990.
University of Lancaster, Centre for the Study of Cultural Values, Conference on ‘The Values of the Enterprise Culture’, September 1989.
Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences, Conference on ‘Methodological Problems of Neo-Institutional Economics’, Uppsala, August 1989.
University of Manchester, Workshop on ‘Evolutionary Theories of Economic and Technological Change’, March 1989.
Review of Political Economy Conference, Malvern, August 1988.
Economic and Social Research Council, ‘European - North American Workshop on Institutional Economics’, London, June 1988.
History of Economic Society 15th Annual Meeting, Toronto, June 1988.
‘New Directions in Post Keynesian Economics’, Malvern, August 1987.
International Conference on ‘The Economics of Self-Management’, Liege, Belgium, August 1985
Cambridge Journal of Economics Conference, Jesus College, Cambridge, July 1985.
Trinity College, University of Cambridge, on ‘Methodological Issues in Keynesian Economics’, July 1983.
University of Bielefeld, Germany, on ‘The Value of Value Theory’, April 1980.
Stockholm, on ‘Alternative Economic Strategies’, February 1980.