For those interested, a recent book by Michael Neary and Graham
Taylor, MONEY AND THE HUMAN CONDITION (St. Martin's 1998) contains a
chapter and references on LETS, mostly in the British context.
Date sent: Tue, 02 Mar 1999 09:30:35 -0800
From: Peter Dorman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Peter,
A potential auxiliary reference for your course, but oriented more
toward development concerns, is Biplab Dasgupta, STRUCTURAL
ADJUSTMENT, GLOBAL TRADE AND THE NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY OF DEVELOPMENT
(Zed Press, 1998, available in paperback at $25). It is one of the
best surveys and
The three volumes of CAPITAL also seem to be available in English as
individual volumes of the Marx/Engels COLLECTED WORKS series (volumes
35 through 37, I think it is), at 25 bucks a pop. The series is sold
by both Pathfinder Press and International Publishers, last I looked.
Someone
Confirmation of reading: your message -
Date:25 Sep 98 18:30
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:239] Re: Disgruntled
Was read at 12:35, 25 Sep 98.
Confirmation of reading: your message -
Date:31 Jul 98 15:15
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L:403] Re: Re: Books on Bolshevik revolution, Leninism
Was read at 17:35, 31 Jul 98.
This spring I'll be teaching a basic economics survey course,
combining micro and macro, and am looking for possible readings books
appropriate to this (pre-principles) level that have readings in BOTH
micro and macro. My initial text is a conservative book by B.
Schiller called
There is a quick rundown on El Barzon in the September 1 WALL
STREET JOURNAL, p.A4 (which I think is the WSJ's only report on the
movement since August). The L.A. TIMES must have also carried some
stuff.
On the teaching of undergraduate economics, I think micro is
probably more