Post on 29-Jul-2021
33rd Annual Meeting of the History of Economics Society 23 – 26 June 2006
Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa, USA
Program of Sessions
Friday 23 June HES Executive Committee Meeting: 1:30 – 4:30 PM Room: ARH 312 On Site Registration: 4:00 – 7:00 PM (continuing through Saturday) Room: BCA Box Office
Plenary Lecture 5:30 – 6:30 PM
BCA Sebring-Lewis Hall
The History of Economic Thought: Its Uses Through Time
Craufurd Goodwin
Duke University Opening Reception 6:30 – 7:15 PM Location: Harris Center Courtyard (Rain location: Harris Center Atrium) Iowa Barbecue 7:15 – 8:45 PM Location: MAC Field (Rain location: Cowles Dining Hall)
Saturday 24 June Session 1: 8:00 – 10:00 AM
Session 1A: Economic Statistics and Human Welfare: Historical and Contemporary
Perspectives Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Thomas Stapleford, University of Notre Dame (tstaplef@nd.edu) Thomas Stapleford, University of Notre Dame To index or not? Cost-of-living statistics and wages in early 20th century (tstaplef@nd.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
Discussant: Spencer Banzhaf, Resources for the Future (banzhaf@rff.org) Julia Mensink, London School of Economics The Human Development Index and its political power (j.mensink@lse.ac.uk) Discussant: Spencer Banzhaf, Resources for the Future (banzhaf@rff.org) Andre Van Hoorn, University of Nijmegen “That man is richest whose pleasures are cheapest”: Rethinking National Accounts (a.vanhoorn@fm.ru.nl) Discussant: Spencer Banzhaf, Resources for the Future (banzhaf@rff.org) Julian Reiss, Complutense University, Madrid and London School of Economics Re-Addressing the Quantity Change Issue (jreiss@filos.ucm.es) Discussant: Spencer Banzhaf, Resources for the Future (banzhaf@rff.org) Session 1B: Eighteenth Century I Room: BCA 152 Chair: Evelyn Forget, University of Manitoba (forget@cc.umanitoba.ca) Loic Charles (University of Paris II/EconomiX) and Christine There (INED) Biography and HOPE: The Strange Case of M. Francois and Doctor Quesnay (charles@ined.fr) (ch_there@ined.fr) Discussant: Evelyn Forget, University of Manitoba (forget@cc.umanitoba.ca) Paul Christensen, Hofstra University J.B. Say’s Contribution to a Bio-Physical Production Theory (ecoppc@hofstra.edu) Discussant: Nesrine Bentemessek, University of Paris I - Sorbonne (eglanine@yahoo.fr) Jose Ricardo Gonçalves and Maria Madi, UNICAMP Thomas Mun on Political Power (josericardobg@yahoo.com.br; alemadi@eco.unicamp.br) Discussant: Glenn Hueckel, Pomona College (glenn.hueckel@pomona.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
2
Session 1C: Institutions and Evolution Room: BCA 242 Chair: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) Ken Kato, Tokyo Metropolitan University J.R. Commons on the Problem of Employment and Industrial Goodwill (kenkato77@hotmail.com) Discussant: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) James Wible, University of New Hampshire Peirce, Newcomb, and Colander on the Principles of Economics (Jim.Wible@unh.edu) Discussant: David Colander, Middlebury College (colander@middlebury.edu) Session 1D: Hayek’s Political Economy Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Andrew Farrant, Dickinson College (farranta@dickinson.edu) Andrew Farrant and Nicola Tynan, Dickinson College Hayek & Hitler: The Road to Serfdom as anti-Carlylean tract? (farranta@dickinson.edu) (tynann@dickinson.edu) Discussant: Sam Bostaph, University of Dallas (bostaph@udallas.edu) Edward McPhail, Dickinson College Hayek’s Road to Serfdom: Was Samuelson Right? (mcphail@dickinson.edu) Discussant: Michael Bradley, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (mbradley@umbc.edu) Sandra Peart (Baldwin-Wallace College) and David M. Levy (George Mason University) Discussion, Construction and Evolution: Mill, Hayek and Buchanan on the Constitutional Order (speart@bw.edu) (DavidMLevy@gmail.com) Discussant: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
3
Session 1E: Economic Theory in Context Room: BCA 269 Chair: Michael Reay, Reed College (Michael.reay@reed.edu) Maria de Fatima Brandao & Antonio Almodovar, CEMPRE/ FEP/ Universidade do Porto Political Economy in Context: Portugal, 1803-1911 (fbrandao@fep.up.pt) and (amal@fep.up.pt) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net) Annie Cot, University of Paris I - Sorbonne The Harvard “Seminar on the Sociology of Pareto”: a seminal case in the history of general equilibrium theory (annie.cot@univ-paris1.fr) Discussant: Michael Reay, Reed College (Michael.reay@reed.edu)
Saturday 24 June Session 2: 10:30 AM – 12:00 Noon
Session 2A: Adam Smith Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@syr.edu) Michael Bradley, University of Maryland, Baltimore County “Liberty”, Competition, and Contestability (mbradley@umbc.edu) Discussant: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) Maria Pia Paganelli, Yeshiva University Distance in Adam Smith: the moralizing function of commerce the Wealth of Nations and the Theory of Moral Sentiments (maria_paganelli@yahoo.com) Discussant: Cecilia Miller, Wesleyan University (cmiller@wesleyan.edu) Leonidas Montes, Universidad Adolfo Ibanez Smith and Ferguson on the militia issue (leonidas.montes@uai.cl) Discussant: Spencer Pack, Connecticut College (sjpac@conncoll.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
4
Session 2B: On 20th century macroeconomics Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Kevin Hoover, University of California, Davis (kdhoover@ucdavis.edu) Daniela Parisi, Catholic University of Milano (Italy) The Five Italian articles written by the young Franco Modigliani (1937-38) (daniela.parisi@unicatt.it) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Pedro Duarte, Duke University A Feasible and Objective Concept of Optimality (pgduarte@econ.duke.edu) Discussant: Kevin Hoover, University of California, Davis kdhoover@ucdavis.edu Richard Kane, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis The Development of U.S. National Accounts (richard.kane@bea.gov) Discussant: John Dawson, Grinnell College (dawson@grinnell.edu) Session 2C: Philosophy & Economics Room: BCA 242 Chair: Cristel DeRouvray (cristel@gmail.com) Franklin Noll, Bureau of Engraving and Printing A Modest Proposal: Post Modern Economic History (franklin.noll@bep.treas.gov) Discussant: Cristel DeRouvray (cristel@gmail.com) Lawrence Boland, Simon Fraser University Philosophy vs. Economics (boland@sfu.ca) Discussant: Maurice Lagueux, University of Montreal (Maurice.lagueux@umontreal.ca) Ivan Moscati, Bocconi University Epistemic Virtues and Theory Choice in Economics (ivan.moscati@unibocconi.it) Discussant: Janet Seiz, Grinnell College (seiz@grinnell.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
5
Session 2D: Young Scholars: Historiographical and Sociological Themes Room: BCA 269 Chair: Annie Cot, University of Paris I - Sorbonne (annie.cot@univ-paris1.fr) Min Hein, Rutgers University Culture of Collaboration in Economics: Homophilous Ties and the Matthew Effect (mhein@sociology.rutgers.edu) Discussant: David Levy, George Mason University (DavidMLevy@gmail.com) Iara Onate, University of Stirling ‘Paradigms’ and ‘Epistemes’ in the History of Economic Thought (ivdo1@stir.ac.uk) Discussant: Annie Cot, University of Paris I - Sorbonne (annie.cot@univ-paris1.fr) Session 2E: The History of (American) Progressivism Room: BCA 152 Chair: Mary S. Morgan, London School of Economics (m.morgan@lse.ac.uk) Mary O. Furner, University of California, Santa Barbara The Ideological Turn: U.S. Progressivism as New Liberalism (furner@history.ucsb.edu) Discussant: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) Tim Leonard, Princeton University How Progressive were the Progressives? (tleonard@princeton.edu) Discussant: Bradley W. Bateman, Grinnell College (bateman@grinnell.edu) Stephen Meardon, Williams College Statistics for Mugwumps (smeardon@williams.edu) Discussant: Mary S. Morgan, London School of Economics (m.morgan@lse.ac.uk)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
6
Saturday 24 June Plenary Session 2: 1:15 – 2:15 PM
BCA Sebring-Lewis Hall
Economists Writing History: American and French Experience in the mid 20th century
Cristel DeRouvray 2005 Dorfman Prize Winner
For Best Dissertation in the History of Economic Thought
Saturday 24 June Session 3: 2:45 – 4:15 PM
Session 3A: Methodology I Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) Esther-Mirjam Sent, University of Nijmegen, (with John Davis, Marquette University) Heterodoxy’s Strategic Pluralism (e.m.sent@fm.ru.nl), (john.davis@mu.edu) Discussant: Ross Emmett, Michigan State University (emmettr@msu.edu) Maurice Lagueux, University of Montreal Regarding the Status and Role of “Economic Laws” (Maurice.lagueux@umontreal.ca) Discussant: Kevin Hoover, University of California, Davis (kdhoover@ucdavis.edu) Nils Goldschmidt, Walter Eucken Institute (with Hermann Rauchenschwandtner) On Epistemology and Critique of Culture in Economics: Carl Menger and the German Historical School (goldschmidt@walter-eucken-institut.de) Discussant: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
7
Session 3B: Utility’s Useful History Room: BCA 152 Chair: Joseph Persky, University of Illinois, Chicago (jpersky@uic.edu) David Teira, UNED (Co-authors: Sophie Jallais and Pierre-Charles Pradier, Université Paris 1) Normative Intuitions in the History of Expected Utility Functions (dteira@fsof.uned.es) Discussant: Craig McLaren, University of California, Riverside (craig.mclaren@email.ucr.edu) David Colander, Middlebury College On the History of Utility (colander@middlebury.edu) Discussant: Joseph Persky, University of Illinois, Chicago (jpersky@uic.edu) Christian Weber, Seattle University (Co-author: Torsten Schmidt, University of New Hampshire) Andreas Voigt on Ordinal and Cardinal Utility in 1893 (cweber@seattleu.edu) Discussant: Wade Hands, University of Puget Sound (hands@ups.edu) Session 3C: Teaching the History of Economic Thought: Round Table 1 Room: BCA 242 Chair: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@syr.edu) Participants: Adolfo Benavides, Texas A&M, Corpus Christi
(abenavides@cob.tamucc.edu) Mike Bradley, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
(mbradley@umbc.edu) Stan Herren, North Dakota State University
(robert.herren@ndsu.edu) Joe Pluta, St. Edward’s University
(joep@admin.stedwards.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
8
Session 3D: Young Scholars: Money, Finance and the Theory of the Firm Room: BCA 269 Chair: Steven Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (steven.medema@cudenver.edu) Rebeca Gomez Betancourt, University of Paris I – Sorbonne E.W. Kemmerer’s Contribution to the Quantity Theory of Money (rebeca.gomezbetancourt@malix.univ-paris1.fr) Discussant: Neil T. Skaggs, Illinois State University (ntskaggs@ilsu.edu) Nesrine Bentemessek, University of Paris I – Sorbonne The South Sea Bubble: the Modern Debate (eglanine@yahoo.fr) Discussant: Stephen Meardon, Williams College (smeardon@williams.edu) Yuichi Kimura, Kyoto University Robbins’s Economics Theory and His Theory of the Firm (yuichikimura@e01.mbox.media.kyoto-u.ac.jp) Discussant: Steven Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (steven.medema@cudenver.edu) Session 3E: Keynes I Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Sherry Kasper, Maryville College J.M. Keynes as a Public Intellectual (sherry.kasper@maryvillecollege.edu) Discussant: David Andrews, State University of New York at Oswego (dandrew1@oswego.edu) Robert Dimand, Brock University What Keynesian Revolution? A Reconsideration Seventy Years After the General Theory (dimand@brocku.ca) Discussant: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Toshiaki Hirai, Sophia University How did Keynes develop his theory from the Treatise to the General Theory (hirai-t@sophia.ac.jp) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
9
David Andrews, State University of New York Keynes’s Political Philosophy (dandrew1@oswego.edu) Discussant: Marco Dardi (marco.dardi@unifi.it)
Saturday 24 June 5:00 – 6:00 PM
Distinguished Guest Lecture BCA Sebring-Lewis Hall
Lend-Lease Reconsidered
Peter F. Clarke, Cambridge University
HES Business Meeting: 6:15 – 7:00 pm Room: BCA 152
Sunday 25 June Session 4: 8:00 – 10:00 AM
Session 4A: The History of Modern Law & Economics Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Steven Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (steven.medema@cudenver.edu) Daniel Green Tracing Jurisprudence in Law and Economics (dag@daustgreen.com) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net) Rob Van Horn, University of Notre Dame The Antitrust Project: Chicago Neoliberalism Makes Its Legal Mark (vanhorn.2@nd.edu) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net) Sophie Harnay and Alain Marciano, University of Reims, Champagne-Ardenne
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
10
From Public Choice to New Law and Economics: The Process of De-Legalisation of the Law (sophie.harnay@wanadoo.fr) (a.marciano@wanadoo.fr) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net) Session 4B: Teaching the History of Economic Thought Round Table 2 Room: BCA 242 Chair: Sherry Kasper (sherry.kasper@maryvillecollege.edu) Participants: Benny Balak, Rollins College
(bbalak@rollins.edu)
Nancy Bertaux, Xavier University (Bertaux@xavier.edu) Sherry Kasper, Maryville College (sherry.kasper@maryvillecollege.edu
Session 4C: Nineteenth Century Themes Room: BCA 269 Chair: Loic Charles, University of Paris II/EconomiX (charles@ined.fr) Evelyn Forget, University of Manitoba Jane Marcet and the Scholarship of Popularization (forget@cc.umanitoba.ca) Discussant: Loic Charles, University of Paris II/EconomiX (charles@ined.fr) Glenn Hueckel, Pomona College Malthus’s “Crochet of Mind”: Labor Command as an “Invariable” Measure of Value (glenn.hueckel@pomona.edu) Discussant: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@syr.edu) Jim Henderson, Valparaiso University Beggars – William Wordsworth vs. Jeremy Bentham (james.henderson@valpo.edu) Discussant: Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (Goodwin@econ.duke.edu) Session 4D: Early Economic Ethics Room: BCA 152
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
11
Chair: Spencer Pack, Connecticut College (sjpac@conncoll.edu) Edd Noell, Westmont College Loving One’s Neighbors in the Marketplace: Just and Unjust Gain in the Old and New Testament (noell@westmont.edu) Discussant: Neil Skaggs, Illinois State University (ntskaggs@ilstu.edu) Uday Chandra, Grinnell College Aristotle’s Economics Revisited: Creating Aristotle (chandrau@grinnell.edu) Discussant: Spencer Pack, Connecticut College (sjpac@conncoll.edu) Sam Bostaph, University of Dallas Deepening the Irony of Utopia: A Mises/Hayek Perspective (bostaph@udallas.edu) Discussant: Russell K. Osgood, Grinnell College (osgood@grinnell.edu) Session 4E: Keeping Faith: Political Economy and Religious Belief Round Table: HOPE 2007 Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Spencer Banzhaf, Resources for the Future (banzhaf@rff.org) Participants: Antonio Almodovar, CEMPRE/FEP-UP
(amal@fep.up.pt)
Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk)
Ross Emmett, Michigan State University (emmettr@msu.edu)
Harro Maas, University of Amsterdam
(H.B.J.B.Maas@uva.nl)
Stephen Meardon, Williams College (smeardon@williams.edu)
Daniela Parisi, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
(daniela.parisi@unicatt.it)
Neil Skaggs, Illinois State University (ntskaggs@ilstu.edu)
Pedro Texeira, CEMPRE/FEP-UP
(pedrotx@fep.up.pt)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
12
Sunday 25 June Session 5: 10:30 AM – 12:15 PM
Session 5A: Applying the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge to Economics Room: BCA 152 Chair: Wade Hands, University of Puget Sound (hands@ups.edu) Tiago Mata, University College London Mapping the landscape of economics – dissent and boundary work (t.mata@ucl.ac.uk) Discussant: Mary S. Morgan, London School of Economics (m.morgan@lse.ac.uk) Neil Stephens, Cardiff University Political Interpretative Flexibility and the Unemployment/Inflation Trade-off (stephensn@cardiff.ac.uk) Discussant: Mary S. Morgan, London School of Economics (m.morgan@lse.ac.uk) Michael Reay, Reed College The Uses of Economics (michael.reay@reed.edu) Discussant: Mary S. Morgan, London School of Economics (m.morgan@lse.ac.uk) Session 5B: Varieties of Law & Economics Historically Contemplated Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Alain Marciano, University of Reims, Champagne-Ardenne (a.marciano@wanadoo.fr) Balbir Sihag Kautilya on Law, Economics, and Ethics (sihag@comcast.net) Discussant: Alain Marciano, University of Reims (a.marciano@wanadoo.fr) Marco Guidi, University of Pisa Bentham’s Political Tactics as a Theory of Agenda (mel.guidi@ec.unipi.it) Discussant: David Colander, Middlebury College (colander@middlebury.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
13
Jimena Hurtado, University of los Andes Jeremy Bentham and Gary Becker: Utilitarianism and Economic Imperialism (jihurtad@uniandes.edu.co) Discussant: David Colander, Middlebury College (colander@middlebury.edu) Session 5C: Henry George’s Influence on Economic Theory Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Polly Cleveland, Barnard College (mcleveland@prdi.org) M. Mason Gaffney, U.C. Riverside Henry George and Knut Wicksell (m.gaffney@surfcity.net) Discussant: Polly Cleveland, Barnard College (mcleveland@prdi.org) Robert Koehn, Brock University Henry George and William Vickery (gjohnsonkoehn@yahoo.com) Discussant: Christopher Ryan (cryan45@mcshi.com) Fred Foldvary, Santa Clara University The Marginalists and the Special Status of Land as a Treatment of Land by Gossen, George, Wieser, Walras, and Pareto (ffoldvary@scu.edu) Discussant: Samuel Bostaph, University of Dallas (bostaph@udallas.edu) Session 5D: Nineteenth Century Theorists Room: BCA 269 Chair: Stephen Meardon, Williams College (smeardon@williams.edu) Pelin Sekerler, PHARE, Centre Walras-Pareto What Rationale For Free Public Libraries: Jevons On Individual And Collective Utility (aysepelin.sekerler@unil.ch) Discussant: Sandra Peart (Baldwin-Wallace College) (speart@bw.edu) Satoko Nakano, Meijigakuin University An Implication of W. Thornton’s and Jevons’s disequilibrium approach for the Marginalist Revolution (satokon@eco.meijigakuin.ac.jp)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
14
Discussant: Sandra Peart, Baldwin Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) Robert Rogers, Ashland University Friedrich List’s Productive Power and Trade Policy (RRogers1@ashland.edu) Discussant: Stephen Meardon, Williams College (smeardon@williams.edu) Session 5E: Young Scholars: Methodological Themes Room: BCA 242 Chair: Harro Maas, University of Amsterdam (H.B.J.B.Maas@uva.nl) Craig McLaren, University of California-Riverside Homo Economicus: Bentham’s Red Herring (craig.mclaren@email.ucr.edu) Discussant: Harro Maas, University of Amsterdam (H.B.J.B.Maas@uva.nl) Tai Young-Taft, New School The Taming of the Economic Agent (taiyoungtaft@yahoo.com) Discussant: Evelyn Forget, University of Manitoba (forget@cc.umanitoba.ca)
Sunday 25 June Plenary Session 3: 1:15 – 2:15 PM
BCA Sebring-Lewis Hall
Hume's Monetary Thinking in Historical Context
Carl Wennerlind Barnard College
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
15
Sunday 25 June Session 6: 2:30 – 4:30 PM
Session 6A: Chapters in American Economics Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (Co-author: Tyler DesRoches, University of Victoria and Natural Resources Canada, tdesroch@pfc.cfs.nrcan.gc.ca) The Institutionalist Reaction to Keynes (rutherfo@uvic.ca) Discussant: John Davis, University of Amsterdam, Marquette University (john.davis@mu.edu) Tiziana Foresti, University of Pisa Veblen’s Reading of Marshall’s Work (ti.foresti@katamail.com) Discussant: Simon Cook, Duke University (sjc68@duke.edu) Spencer Banzhaf, Resources for the Future Applied Economics at Mid-century: The Harvard Water Program (banzhaf@rff.org) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Session 6B: Shaping the Discipline of Economics Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Tim Leonard, Princeton University (tleonard@princeton.edu) Manuela Mosca, University of Lecce On the concept of natural monopoly in the history of economic thought (mosca@spbo.unibo.it) Discussant: David Teira, UNED (dteira@fsof.uned.es) Nicholas Gallois, University of Paris 1, Pantheon-Sorbonne Does Political Economy Serve Peace? Leon Walras and the Nobel Peace Prize (nicolas.gallois@voila.fr) Discussant: Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (Goodwin@econ.duke.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
16
Thomas Scheiding, St. Louis University Practicing What They Preach? A Historical Review of the Funding of the American Economic Review (tscheidi@slu.edu) Discussant: Humberto Barreto (barretoh@wabash.edu) Session 6C: Eighteenth Century Theorists Room: BCA 269 Chair: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@syr.edu) Spencer Pack, Connecticut College Aristotle on the Unnatural Use of Money and Smith’s Partial Answer (sjpac@conncoll.edu) Discussant: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@syr.edu) John Berdell, Stabilizing Economics: Lessons from Richard Cantillon’s Essai (jberdell@depaul.edu) Discussant: Walraevens Benoit, PHARE (djbellay@free.fr) Cecilia Miller, Wesleyan University Curious Precursors of Adam Smith: Grimmelhausen and Mandeville (cmiller@wesleyan.edu) Discussant: Evelyn Forget, University of Manitoba (forget@cc.umanitoba.ca) Session 6D: Roundtable on The Vanity of the Philosopher Room: BCA 269 Chair: Andrew Farrant, Dickinson College (farranta@dickinson.edu) Participants:
Andrew Farrant, Dickinson College (farranta@dickinson.edu) Dan Hammond, Wake Forest University (hammond@wfu.edu) Kevin D. Hoover, Duke University (kdhoover@ucdavis.edu) Joseph Persky, University of Illinois at Chicago (jpersky@uic.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
17
Charles McCann, University of Pittsburgh (crmccann@aol.com) Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) David M. Levy, George Mason University (DavidMLevy@gmail.com)
Session 6E: On Alfred Marshall: In Honor of John Whitaker, Distinguished Fellow Room: BCA 152 Chair: Tiziano Raffaelli, University of Pisa (t.raffaelli@fls.unipi.it) Marco Dardi The Background of Marshall’s Theory of Demand (marco.dardi@unifi.it) Discussant: John Whitaker, University of Virginia (jw9s@cms.mail.virginia.edu) Brian Loasby, University of Stirling Marshall’s Views on Organization and Knowledge (b.j.loasby@stir.ac.uk) Discussant: John Whitaker, University of Virginia (jw9s@cms.mail.virginia.edu) Steven Medema, University of Colorado at Denver Marshallian welfare economics and the welfare economics of Marshall (steven.medema@cudenver.edu) Discussant: John Whitaker, University of Virginia (jw9s@cms.mail.virginia.edu) Simon Cook, Duke University Marshall and Socialism Revisited (sjc68@duke.edu) Discussant: John Whitaker, University of Virginia (jw9s@cms.mail.virginia.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
18
Sunday 25 June
Presidential Address 5:15 – 6:15 PM
BCA Sebring-Lewis Hall
A Tale of Two Mainstreams: Economics and Philosophy of Natural Science in the Mid-20th Century
D. Wade Hands, University of Puget Sound
(hands@ups.edu)
Reception 6:30 – 7:30 PM
Harris Center Atrium
HES Banquet 7:45 PM
Harris Center Concert Hall
Monday 26 June Session 7: 8:00 – 10:00 AM
Session 7A: Nineteenth Century Political Economy Room: BCA 152 Chair: Leonidas Montes, Universidad Adolfo Ibanez (leonidas.montes@uai.cl) Adolfo Benavides, Texas A&M University – Corpus Christi Simon Bolivar’s Contributions to Latin American Economic Thought (abenavides@cob.tamucc.edu) Discussant: Pablo Silva, Grinnell College (silvajp@grinnell.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
19
Jose Luis Cardoso, ISEG, Technical University of Lisbon (Co-author: Carlos Bastien, ISEG, Technical University of Lisbon) Uses and abuses of political economy in parliamentary debates (1850-1920) (jcardoso@iseg.utl.pt) Discussant: Marco Guidi, University of Pisa (mel.guidi@ec.unipi.it) Yasunori Fukagai, Yokohama National University J.S. Mill on British Empire and his economic languages (fukagai@ynu.ac.jp) Discussant: Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) Session 7B: The History of Development Economics Room: SCI 2022 Chair: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Neil Skaggs, Illinois State University Explaining the Long Delay in the Acceptance of the Theory of Finance in Economic Development (ntskaggs@ilstu.edu) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Ana Maria Bianchi, Universidade de Sao Paulo Hirschman and the Visiting-Economist Syndrome (amafbian@usp.br) Discussant: Annie Cot, University of Paris I - Sorbonne (annie.cot@univ-paris1.fr) Session 7C: Methodology of Contemporary Economics Room: BCA 242 Chair: Esther-Mirjam Sent, University of Nijmegen (e.m.sent@fm.ru.nl) John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University The Turn In and Return of Orthodoxy in Recent Economics (john.davis@mu.edu) Discussant: Ross Emmett, Michigan State University (emmettr@msu.edu) Marino Muzhani, University of Florence Technological Progress and Growth: The Neoclassical Perception (m.muzhani@inwind.it)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
20
Discussant: Lawrence Boland, Simon Fraser University (boland@sfu.ca) Edward Nik-Khah, Roanoke College A Tale of Two Auctions (nik@roanoke.edu) Discussant: Joseph Persky, University of Illinois at Chicago (jpersky@uic.edu) Session 7D: Forming 20th Century Economics Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Cristina Marcuzzo, Università di Roma Is Profit Maximization a Part of Cambridge Tradition in Economics? (cristina.marcuzzo@uniroma1.it) Discussant: Christian Weber, Seattle University (cweber@seattleu.edu) Manuel Fernandez-Grela, University of Santiago de Compostela Losing the Battle: The Story of “Tariffs: The Case Examined” (aepgrela@usc.es) Discussant: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk)
Monday 26 June Session 8: 10:30 AM – 12:00 Noon
Session 8A: Keynes II Room: SCI 2022 Session removed Session 8B: Elitism and Anti-Elitism Room: SCI 2021 Chair: Steven Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (steven.medema@cudenver.edu) Daniel Hammond, Wake Forest University Markets, Politics, and Democracy at Chicago (hammond@wfu.edu) Discussant: Ross Emmett, Michigan State University (emmettr@msu.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
21
Sandra Peart (Baldwin-Wallace College) and David M. Levy (George Mason University) The Case for Non-Elite Experts in Economics (speart@bw.edu), (DavidMLevy@gmail.com) Discussant: Joseph Persky, University of Illinois, Chicago (jpersky@uic.edu) Tim Leonard, Princeton University American Progressives and the Rise of Expertocracy (tleonard@princeton.edu) Discussant: Charles McCann, University of Pittsburgh (crmccann@aol.com) Session 8C: Young Scholars: Calculation, Alienation and Capacities Room: BCA 152 Chair: John Davis, University of Amsterdam, Marquette University (john.davis@mu.edu) Douglas MacKenzie, SUNY, Plattsburgh Capital Accumulation and Income Distribution in the Interwar Debate over Socialism (dmackenz_2000@yahoo.com) Discussant: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) Walraevens Benoit, PHARE Division of labour and Virtue in the work of Adam Smith (djbellay@free.fr) Discussant: Spencer Pack, Connecticut College (sjpac@conncoll.edu) Sophie Pelle, University of Paris 1 – Sorbonne The Emergence of the Capabilities Approach in the Early Work of Amartya Sen (sophie.pelle@malix.univ-paris1.fr) Discussant: John Davis, University of Amsterdam, Marquette University (john.davis@mu.edu) Session 8D: Methodology and History Room: BCA 269 Chair: Tiago Mata, London School of Economics (t.mata@ucl.ac.uk) Jose Guillermo Pelez, Universidad Autanoma Metropolitana, Xochimilco, Mexico Walras’s Tantonement and the Diagonal Dominant Hypothesis (jgpg@correo.azc.uam.mx) Discussant: Humberto Barreto, Wabash College (barretoh@wabash.edu)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
22
Stephen Ziliak, Roosevelt University Gosset and Fisher: The Fable of the Bee and the Wasp (sziliak@roosevelt.edu) Discussant: Cecilia Miller, Wesleyan University (cmiller@wesleyan.edu) Zhu Chengquan, Dongbei University of Finance and Economics (DUFE), Dalian, China Reflections on Three Controversies about the Methodology of Economics (cuishaozhong@dufe.edu.cn) Discussant: Tiago Mata, London School of Economics (t.mata@ucl.ac.uk) Session 8E: History of Economics in the United States Room: BCA 242 Chair: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (r.e.backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Stephen Meardon, Williams College Before the Founding of the American Economic Association (smeardon@williams.edu) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net) Bradley Bateman, Grinnell College From 1885 to WWII (bateman@grinnell.edu) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net) Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham The Postwar Period (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Discussant: Warren J. Samuels, Michigan State University (wjsamuels@bellsouth.net)
BCA: Bucksbaum Center for the Arts | SCI: Noyce Science Center
23