I'd bring in some of the labor process literature, like  Devine & Reich, in 
the REVIEW OF RADICAL POLITICAL ECONOMICS, 1981. There was also a good 
comment on that paper in that journal, too, if I remember correctly. ;-)

Peter Dorman and Gil Skillman (are you there, Gil?) are obvious source of 
information on other positive microeconomics articles and books.

In terms of welfare economics, I'd recommend EK Hunt's article in Ed Nell's 
GROWTH, PROFITS, AND PROPERTY, along with Albert & Hahnel's QUIET 
REVOLUTION IN WELFARE ECONOMICS.

At 03:21 PM 2/3/00 +1100, you wrote:
>Pen-lers, I am teaching microeconomics  at the 4th year level, here in 
>Newcastle
>Australia. My previous teaching in micro was at the first year level, many 
>years
>ago.
>My colleague will teach the basic orthodox stuff with the mathematical 
>bells and
>whistles (Slutsky equations etc). I want to develop some less traditional 
>areas,
>such as advertising, as well as Post Keynesian pricing theory, the endogeneity
>of tastes and the impact of deregulation (airlines?!).
>I would be most grateful for suggestions re interesting and provocative
>references and any other non-standard topics.
>Thanks.
>Kind regards
>Martin

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine

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