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Contributors to the two volumes

Alain Beraud is Emeritus Professor at the CY Cergy Paris Universite France and a member of the research centre Thema (Centre National de la Recherche Sci- entifique). His recent publications include “Les ingenieurs economistes franςais et la Theorie Generale de Keynes (1945-1952)” (Revue d’histoire de lapensee economique, 2022); “Fred Manville Taylor and the Origins of the Term ‘Say’s Law’”, with Guy Numa (History of Political Economy, 2022); “A Rebuttal of James Ahiakport’s Fallacies and Misrepresentations of Jean-Baptiste Say’s Writings and Thinking”, with Guy Numa (Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Virtual Issue, 2021); “Les economistes francophones et les equilibres non-walrasiens (1970-1985)” (∏conomia.

2020); “Leon Walras’s Theory of Public Interest: Toward an Organic View of the State”, with Guy Numa (Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2019); “Lord Keynes and Mr. Say: A Prox­imity of Ideas”, with Guy Numa (Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2019); and “Use values and exchange values in Marx’s extended reproduction schemes”, with Carlo Benetti, Edith Klimovsky and Antoine Rebeyrol (The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2018).

Vincent Bourdeau is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Franche-Comte (Besanςon, France) and a member of the research centre Logiques de l’Agir (UR 2274). His main research areas concern political philos­ophy, philosophy of economics, philosophy of law and history of social sciences in relation with socialist and republican ideas. He edited Quand les socialistes inventaient l’avenir 1825-1860 (La Decouverte, 2015, with Th. Bouchet, E. Castleton, L. Frobert and F. Jarrige) and Les encyclopedismes en France a l’ere des revolutions (1789-1850) (Presses Universitaires de Franche-Comte, 2019, with J.-L. Chappey and J. Vincent).

Pascal Bridel is Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Laus­anne and founder of the Walras-Pareto Centre.

His recent publications include “Robertson’s Industrial Fluctuation (1915): An early Real Business Cycle-like Approach” (Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2017); J.C.L. Simonde de Sismondi, Huvres economiques completes (Economica, 6 vols, 2012-2018, edited with F. Dal Degan and N. Eyguesier); “The part played by general equi­librium in the liquidity preference vs loanable funds episode (1936-1956)” (The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2021); and “Sismondi’s Price Theory: From a Liberating to a Despotic Market” (History of Political Economy, 2021). Essais sur l'histoire de la pensee economique. Un nain sur les epaules de geants (in French and English) (Classiques Garnier, 2022).

Clement Coste is Associate Professor at Sciences Po Lyon, France, and a member of the research centre Triangle (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique). His recent publications include “A trilogy of debt: the emancipatory virtue of public debt in Saint-Simonian, liberal and socialist discourses in nineteenth cen­tury France (1825-1852)” (The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2020); “Inventorier et inventer la societe. Constantin Pecqueur (1801­1887): expertise sociale et processus de socialisation” (L'Annee Sociologique, 2017); “ ‘Si je crois a la liberte c’est que je crois a l’egalite’: philosophie pour une republique sociale et pratique de l’egalite autour de 1848” (Revue euro- peenne des sciences sociales, 2018); and “L’economique contre le politique. La dette, son amortissement et son financement chez de jeunes et vieux saint- simoniens (1825-1880)” (Cahiers d'economiepolitique, 2016). He also edited De la Republique de Constantin Pecqueur (Presses Universitaires de Franche- Comte, 2017, with L. Frobert and M. Lauricella).

Thierry Demals is Associate Professor at the University of Lille, France, and a member of the research centre Clerse (Cnrs, University of Lille). His recent pub­lications include “Forbonnais, the two balances and the Economistes” (with Alex­andra Hyard, The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2015); “Mercantilism and the science of trade” and, with Gilbert Faccarello, “French Enlightenment” (both in G.

Faccarello and H.D. Kurz (eds), Handbook on the History of Economic Analysis, vol. 2, Edward Elgar, 2016); “Enlightenment in Europe” (Routledge Historical Resources/History of Economic Thought, 2017); and “Pareto and Saint-Simonianism. The History of a Criticism” (with Alexandra Hyard, The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2020).

Ragιp Ege is Emeritus Professor at the University ofStrasbourg and a member ofthe research center Beta (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique). His recent publications include “The employment contract with externalized costs: The avatars of Marxian exploitation” (with Rodolphe Dos Santos Ferreira, The Euro­pean Journal of History of Economic Thought, 2018); “L’ aggiornamento des sciences economiques en France: le cas strasbourgeois au tournant des annees 1970” (with Rodolphe Dos Santos Ferreira and Sylvie Rivot, ∏conomuι. His­tory, Methodology, Philosophy, 2020); “The net product in the ‘Formule du Tableau Economique’: Lessons from a formalism” (with Rodolphe Dos Santos Ferreira, Portuguese Economic Journal, 2022); and “From a Hegelian to a Smithian Reading of Rawls” (with Herrade Igersheim, in Economic Reason and Political Reason. Deliberation and the Construction of Public Space in the Society of Communication, edited by Jean Mercier-Ythier, ISTE/Wiley, 2022).

Gilbert Faccarello is Emeritus Professor at Pantheon-Assas University, Paris, France. He is a co-founder of The European Journal ofthe History of Economic Thought published by Routledge and acted as a chairman of the Council of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought. His publications include books and articles in the history of economic thought. Recently, he published “A Calm investigation into Mr Ricardo’s principles of international trade”, “A dance teacher for paralysed people. Charles de Coux and the dream of a Christian political economy” and “ ‘I profess to have made no discovery’. James Mill on comparative advantage” (The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2015, 2017 and 2022), and he edited The Reception of David Ricardo in Continental Europe and Japan (Routledge, 2014, with Masashi Izumo), Handbook on the History of Economic Analysis (Edward Elgar, 2016, three volumes, with Heinz D.

Kurz), Political Economy and Religion (2017, a special issue of The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought), Marx at 200 (2018, a special issue of The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, with Heinz D. Kurz) and Malthus across Nations. The Reception of Thomas Robert Malthus in Europe, America and Japan (Edward Elgar, 2020, with Masashi Izumo and Hiromi Morishita).

Ludovic Frobert is Research Director at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and a member of the research centre Triangle (Lyon, France). He was the director of a national research programme on French utopian socialism between 1830 and 1870 (ANR “Utopies19”). His recent publications include “What is a just society? The answer according to the Socialistes Fraternitaires Louis Blanc, Constantin Pecqueur, and Franςois Vidal” (History of Politi­cal Economy, 2014), De la Republique de Constantin Pecqueur (1801-1887) (edited with C. Coste and M. Lauricella, Presses Universitaires de Franche- Comte, 2017), “Theology and knowledge of the ‘collective man’ in the writings of Pierre-Simon Ballanche” (in J.L. Cardoso, H.D. Kurz, and Ph. Steiner (eds), Economic Analyses in Historical Perspective, Routledge, 2017), Les Canuts, ou la democratie turbulente: Lyon 1831-1834 (2nd edition, Libel, 2017) and Une imagination republicaine, Franςois-Vincent Raspail (1794-1878) (edited with J. Barbier, Presses universitaires de Franche-Comte, 2017).

Antoin E. Murphy is a retired Professor and Fellow Emeritus of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, and a co-founder of The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought published by Routledge. His publications include Richard Cantillon: Entrepreneur and Economist (Oxford University Press, 1986), John Law: Economic Theorist and Policymaker (Oxford University Press, 1997), Du Tot. Histoire du Systeme de John Law (1716-1720) (ed., INED, 2000), The Gen­esis of Macroeconomics (2008), and The Fall of the Celtic Tiger (with Donal Donovan, Oxford University Press, 2013).

Guy Numa is Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA. His recent publications include “The Mon­etary Economics of Jules Dupuit” (The European Journal of the History ofEco- nomic Thought, 2016), “Charles Coquelin and Jules Dupuit on Banking and Credit” (Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2017), “Jean-Baptiste Say on Free Trade” (History of Political Economy, 2019), “Money as a Store of Value: Jean-Baptiste Say on Hoarding and Idle Balances” (History of Political Economy, 2020) and, with Alain Beraud, “Beyond Say’s Law. The Significance of J.-B. Say’s Monetary Views” (Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2018) and “Retrospectives: Lord Keynes and Mr. Say: A Proximity of Ideas” (Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2019).

Arnaud Orain is Professor at the University of Paris 8 (Saint-Denis, France). He was Davis Fellow of the History Department of Princeton University in 2015­16 and Florence Gould Fellow of Princeton Institute for Advanced Study in 2020-21. His recent publications include Les voies de la richesse? La physi- ocratie en question (1760-1850) (edited with G. Klotz and Ph. Minard, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2017), La politique du merveilleux. Une autre histoire du Systeme de Law, 1695-1795 (Fayard, “L’epreuve de l’Histoire”, 2018) and Les savoirs perdus de l’economie. Contribution a l’equilibre du vivant (Gal- limard, “Nrf essais”, 2023).

Jean-Pierre Potier is Emeritus Professor at the Universite Lumiere (Lyon, France) and a member of the research centre Triangle (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique). He was a co-editor of the the European Society of the History of Economic Thought, 2022) and Comment ςa matche. Une sociologie de l'appariement (Presses de Sciences-Po, 2022, edited with Melchior Simioni).

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Source: Faccarello G., Silvant C. (eds.). A History of Economic Thought in France: The Long Nineteenth Century. Routledge,2023. — 438 p. 2023

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