LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
Davide Antonioli is associate professor at the University “G. d’Annunzio” of Chieti- Pescara. His research interests are about innovation and technological change, industrial relations and environmental innovation, organizational changes and firms’ economic performance.
His publications include articles (among others) published in Research Policy, Papers in Regional Science, Economia Politica, Journal of Analytical and Institutional Economics, Ecological Economics, Growth and Change, and Economic and Industrial Democracy.Salvatore Biasco is retired professor from Sapienza University of Rome. His research interests are international and public economics. He has published many articles on political economy issues (such as taxation), and, among the latest, a book on Rethinking Capitalism: Economic Crisis and the Future of the Left (in Italian: Ripensando il capitalismo. La crisi economica e ilfuturo della sinistra).
Marcella Corsi is full professor at Sapienza University of Rome and editor of the International Review of Sociology. She is also associate member of the Center of European Research on Microfinance (CERMi) at Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management. Her research interests are the history of economic thought, feminist economics and human development. Her publications include, among the latest, “Inequality and Poverty” (with G. Guarini), in Handbook of Heterodox Economics, edited by T Jo, L. Chester and C. D’Ippoliti (2017); “Gender, Class and the Crisis” (with V Cirillo and C. D’Ippoliti), in Varieties of Economic Inequality, edited by S. Fadda and P Tridico (2016).
Carlo D’Ippoliti is associate professor at Sapienza University of Rome, and editor of PSL Quarterly Review and Moneta e Credito. His research interests are the history of economic thought, economics of gender and European political economy. His publications include Economics of Diversity (2011) and, as a coeditor, The Handbook of Heterodox Economics (forthcoming 2018).
Peter Groenewegen is honorary associate and emeritus professor at the University of Sydney. He is a distinguished fellow of the History of Economics Society since 2005, a distinguished fellow of the Economic Society of Australia since 2010, a distinguished fellow of the History of Economic Thought of Australia since 2010 and an Honorary Life Member of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought since 2007. His most recent book is The Minor Marshallians and Alfred Marshall (2012).
Geoffrey Harcourt is a graduate of Melbourne and Cambridge Universities. His research interests include post-Keynesian theory and applied work, and applications to policy; history of economic theory; intellectual biography. His publications include Some Cambridge Controversies in the Theory of Capital (1972); A “SecondEdition” of The General Theory, 2 vols., coedited with P Riach (1997); The Structure of Post-Keynesian Economics (2006); Joan Robinson, coauthored with P Kerr (2009); The Oxford Handbook of Post-Keynesian Economics, 2 vols., coedited with P Kriesler (2013); and 13 volumes of selected essays.
Jan Kregel is director of research at the Levy Economics Institute, director of the Levy Institute master’s program in economic theory and policy, and head of the Institute’s Monetary Policy and Financial Structure program. He also holds the position of professor of development finance at Tallinn University of Technology. His major works include a series of books on economic theory, among them, Rate of Profit, Distribution and Growth: Two Views (1971); The Theory of Economic Growth (1972); Theory of Capital (1976); and Origini e sviluppo dei mercati finanziari (1996).
Heinz D. Kurz is emeritus professor at the University of Graz. His research interests are economic theory and history of economic thought. He has published numerous papers in journals, including Australian Economic Papers, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Economica, European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, European Journal of Political Economy, History of Political Economy and Oxford Economic Papers.
He has published several books with major international publishers, including Cambridge University Press, Basil Blackwell, Polity Press, Routledge and Edward Elgar. His publications include Theory of Production: A Long-Period Analysis, with N. Salvadori (1995); The Elgar Companion to David Ricardo, edited with N. Salvadori (2015); The Dissemination of Economic Ideas, edited with T Nishizawa and K. Tribe (2011); Critical Essays on Piero Sraffa Legacy in Economics (2008).Maria Cristina Marcuzzo is full professor at Sapienza University of Rome. She has worked on classical monetary theory, the Cambridge school of economics, Keynesian economics and, more recently, Keynes investments in financial markets. She has published about one hundred articles in journals and books, plus authoring or editing 20 volumes.
Nerio Naldi is associate professor at Sapienza University of Rome. His research interests are focused on history of economic thought and, in particular, on biographical research on Piero Sraffa and Antonio Gramsci. His publications include “Two Notes on Piero Sraffa and Antonio Gramsci,” Cambridge Journal of Economics (2012).
Sergio Parrinello is retired professor from Sapienza University of Rome. His research is focused on the theory of production, Keynes and Sraffa theories and developments, the theory of international trade and equilibrium and causal models. His publications include, among others, “Numeraire, Savings and the Instability of a Competitive Equilibrium,” Metroeconomica (2010); “Causality and Normal States in Economics and Other Disciplines,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought (2013); “A Search for Distinctive Features of Demand-Led Growth Models,” PSL Quarterly Review (2014).
Cosimo Perrotta is retired professor from the University of Salento. His research interests include ancient and medieval economic thought; mercantilist and Enlightenment economics; and classical and Marxist economics. His publications include many articles published in History of Political Economy, European Journal for the History of Economic Thought and many other journals and contributed volumes.
Among the monographs are Consumption as an Investment: The Fear of Goods from Hesiod to Adam Smith (2004) and Unproductive Labour in Political Economy: The History of an Idea (forthcoming).Paolo Pini is full professor at the University of Ferrara. His research activity is in the fields of technological change, innovations in firm organization and work organization, employees’ participation and trade unions. Recent works have been published in various journals, both national and international, such as Economia Politica, Economics of Innovation and New Technology, International Review of Applied Economics, Journal of Socio-Economics, Economia & Lavoro and International Journal of Manpower.
Annalisa Rosselli is full professor at the University of Rome Tor Vergata. She was president of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought from 2012 to 2014. She has published (with M. C. Marcuzzo) Ricardo and the Gold Standard (1991); Economists in Cambridge: A Study through Their Correspondence (2005) and many articles on history of monetary theory, classical political economy, the Cambridge school and Keynesian policies in the 1950s.
Neri Salvadori is full professor at the University of Pisa. His research interests are economic theory and history of economic thought. He has published numerous papers in journals, including in Cambridge Journal of Economics, Economic Theory, European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, European Journal of Political Economy, History of Political Economy, International Economic Review, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization and Journal of Economic Methodology. He has published several books with major international publishers, including Cambridge University Press, Routledge and Edward Elgar. His publications include Theory of Production: A Long-Period Analysis, with H. Kurz (1995); The Elgar Companion to David Ricardo, edited with H. Kurz (2015); and Revisiting Classical Economics: Studies in Long-Period Analysis, with H.
Kurz (2015).Michele Salvati is emeritus professor at the State University of Milan and editor of the journal Il Mulino. His present research interests are the political economy aimed at Italian and European growth and the theory of democracy. His main publications in these subjects are Capitalismo, mercato e democrazia (2009) and Cinquepezzifacili sull'Italia (2014).
Alfonso Sanchez Hormigo holds the Ernest Lluch Chair at the University of Zaragoza. He has published several articles and books on history of economic thought. His publications include Los economistas clasicos, with Alessandro Roncaglia (2011).
Bertram Schefold is senior professor at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt. His research interests are economic theory, history of economic thought, energy policy and general economic policy. His publications include Essays on Piero Sraffa: Critical Perspectives on the Revival of Classical Theory, coedited with K. Bharadwaj (1990, reprint 2017); Business Cycles in Economic Thought: A History, coedited with A. Alcouffe and M. Poettinger (2017); Great Economic Thinkers from the Classicals to the Moderns: Translations from the Series Klassiker der Nationalokonomie (2017); and Great Economic Thinkers from Antiquity to the Historical School: Translations from the Series Klassiker der Nationalokonomie (2016).
Mario Tonveronachi is retired professor from the University of Siena. His research interests are macroeconomic theory and policy, financial systems and financial regulation. His more recent publications include “Three Proposals for Revitalising the European Union,” PSL Quarterly Review (2016); “Revising the European Central Bank’s Operations and Euro Area Fiscal Rules to Support Growth and Employment,” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics (2015); “Post-Crisis International Regulatory Standards and Their Inclusion in the European Framework,” in Financial Regulation in the European Union, edited with R. Kattel and J. Kregel (2015); “Post-Keynesian, Post-Sraffian Economics: An Outline” (with A. Roncaglia), in Contributions to Economic Theory, Policy, Development and Finance: Essays in Honor of Jan A. Kregel, edited by D. Papadimitriou (2014).
Gianni Vaggi is full professor at the University of Pavia. His research interests are history of economic thought, economic analysis and development economics. His publications include A Concise History of Economic Thought—From Mercantilism to Monetarism, with P. Groenewegen (2003) and Economic Development and Social Change: Historical Roots and Modern Perspectives, edited with G. Stathakis (2006).
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- Allen R.C., Bengtsson T., Dribe M.. Living Standards in the Past: New Perspectives on Well-Being in Asia and Europe. Oxford University Press,2005. - 495 p., 2005