Cambridge Journal of Economics

Volume 39, n° 6, November 2015

Special Issue: Perspectives on the Contributions of Richard Goodwin

  • VELUPILLAI K. Vela Velupillai - Perspectives on the contributions of Richard Goodwin, pp. 1485-1496
  • CALLADINE Chris - Richard Goodwin at Peterhouse, pp. 1497-1505
  • DI MATTEO Massimo, SORDI Serena - Goodwin in Siena: economist, social philosopher and artist, pp. 1507-1527
  • SOLOW Robert - A couple of thoughts about the matrix multiplier: Richard Goodwin at 10 × 10, pp. 1529-1532
  • CHIODI Guglielmo - On Richard Goodwin’s Elementary Economics from the Higher Standpoint, pp. 1533-1550
  • VELUPILLAI K. Vela - Iteration, tâtonnement, computation and economic dynamics, pp. 1551-1567
  • HARCOURT G. C. - Fusing indissolubly the cycle and the trend: Richard Goodwin’s profound insight, pp. 1569-1578
  • PATNAIK Prabhat - Goodwin on the optimal growth path for a developing economy, pp. 1579-1586
  • RÖSSLER Otto E. - Richard Goodwin’s recruitment of non-linearity into a monolithic scientific community: an homage, pp. 1587-1590
  • FLASCHEL Peter - Goodwin’s MKS system: a baseline macro model, pp. 1591-1605
  • ZAMBELLI Stefano - Dynamical coupling, the non-linear accelerator and the persistence of business cycles, pp. 1607-1628
  • GANDOLFO Giancarlo - The Tobin tax in a continuous-time non-linear dynamic model of the exchange rate, pp. 1629-1643
  • AMBROSI Gerhard Michael - The Goodwin growth cycle model as solution to a variational problem, pp. 1645-1658

(résumés du n° 6/2015)

Volume 39, n° 5, September 2015

Articles

  • GOUGH Ian - Climate change and sustainable welfare: the centrality of human needs, pp. 1191-1214
  • DAVIS John B. - Stratification economics and identity economics, pp. 1215-1229
  • WRENN Mary V. - Agency and neoliberalism, pp. 1231-1243
  • SNOWDEN Nicholas - What really caused the Great Recession? Rhyme and repetition in a theme from the 1930s, pp. 1245-1262
  • BALTAR Carolina Troncoso - Inflation and economic growth in an open developing country: the case of Brazil, pp. 1263-1280
  • KALTENBRUNNER Annina. PAINCEIRA Juan Pablo - Developing countries’ changing nature of financial integration and new forms of external vulnerability: the Brazilian experience, pp. 1281-1306
  • NASSIF André, FEIJÓ Carmem, ARAÚJO Eliane - Structural change and economic development: is Brazil catching up or falling behind? pp. 1307-1332
  • KIEFER David, RADA Codrina - Profit maximising goes global: the race to the bottom, pp. 1333-1350
  • ALAIN Olivier - Tackling the instability of growth: a Kaleckian-Harrodian model with an autonomous expenditure component, pp. 1351-1371
  • GREGORY-SMITH Ian, MAIN Brian G. M. - Heads I win, tails you lose? A career analysis of executive pay and corporate performance, pp. 1373-1398
  • REZAI Armon - Demand and distribution in integrated economies, pp. 1399-1414
  • PASSARELLA Marco Veronese, BARON Hervé - Capital’s humpback bridge: ‘financialisation’ and the rate of turnover in Marx’s economic theory, pp. 1415-1441
  • VAN HORN Robert, EMMETT Ross B. - Two trajectories of democratic capitalism in the post-war Chicago school: Frank Knight versus Aaron Director, pp. 1443-1455

Commentary

  • ELLMAN Michael - The UK’s Coalition government and heterodox economics, pp. 1457-1464  

Review Article

  • KING J. E. - Maurice Dobb, Political Economist (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), pp. 1465-1480

(résumés du n° 5/2015)

Volume 39, n° 4, July 2015

  • ARENA Richard, LAWSON  Tony - Introduction, pp. 987-992
  • LAWSON Tony - Process, order and stability in Veblen, pp. 993-1030
  • PRATTEN Stephen - Dewey on habit, character, order and reform, pp. 1031-1052
  • LAWSON Clive - Order and process in institutionalist thought: Commons and Ayres, pp. 1053-1069
  • CALDARI Katia - Marshall and complexity: a necessary balance between process and order, pp. 1071-1085
  • ARENA Richard - Order, process and morphology: Sraffa and Wittgenstein, pp. 1087-1108
  • MARTINS Nuno Ornelas - Interpreting the capitalist order before and after the marginalist revolution, pp. 1109-1127
  • MOURA Mário Graça - Schumpeter’s conceptions of process and order, pp. 1129-1148
  • John Latsis - Shackle on time, uncertainty and process, pp. 1149-1165
  • LEWIS Paul - Notions of order and process in Hayek: the significance of emergence, pp. 1167-1190

(résumés du n° 4/2015)

Volume 39, n° 3, May 2015

  • SPENCER David A. - Developing an understanding of meaningful work in economics: the case for a heterodox economics of work, pp. 675-688
  • DELLA GIUSTA Marina, JEWELL Sarah - Unpaid work and conformity: why care? pp. 689-710
  • PHILP Bruce, SLATER Gary, WHEATLEY Daniel - New Labour and work-time regulation: a Marxian analysis of the UK economy, pp. 711-732
  • SULEMAN Fátima - The employment relationship in an (almost) structureless labour market: the case of domestic work, pp. 733-750
  • KARACIMEN Elif - Interlinkages between credit, debt and the labour market: evidence from Turkey, pp. 751-767
  • AKINCI Umit, KARAHANOGULLARI Yigit - Convergence of monetary equivalent of labour times (MELTs) in two Marxian interpretations, pp. 769-781
  • DA MOTTA E ALBUQUERQUE Eduardo - Visible seeds of socialism and metamorphoses of capitalism: socialism after Rosdolsky, pp. 785-805
  • CARTELIER Jean - Early classics and Quesnay after Sraffa: a suggested interpretation, pp. 807-824
  • WHITE Graham - The new Keynesian view of aggregate demand: some reflections from a classical-Sraffian standpoint, pp. 825-842
  • MORGAN Jamie - What’s in a name? Tony Lawson on neoclassical economics and heterodox economics, pp. 843-865

Financialisation, income distribution and crisis

  • LANG Dany - Financialisation, income distribution and the crisis, pp. 867-870
  • CORDONNIER Laurent, VAN DE VELDE Franck - The demands of finance and the glass ceiling of profit without investment, pp. 871-885
  • HUSSON Michel - Unemployment, working time and financialisation: the French case, pp. 887-905
  • HEIN Eckhard - Finance-dominated capitalism and re-distribution of income: a Kaleckian perspective, pp. 907-934
  • STOCKHAMMER Engelbert - Rising inequality as a cause of the present crisis, pp. 935-958
  • STORM Servaas, NAASTEPAD C.W.M. - Europe’s Hunger Games: Income Distribution, Cost Competitiveness and Crisis, pp. 959-986

(résumés du n° 3/2015)

Volume 39, n° 2, March 2015

Special Issue: Equal Pay as a Moving Target: International perspectives on forty-years of addressing the gender pay gap

  • O'REILLY Jacqueline, SMITH Mark, DEAKIN Simon, BURCHELL Brendan - Equal Pay as a Moving Target: International perspectives on forty-years of addressing the gender pay gap, pp. 299-317-Grimshaw - The 40-year pursuit of equal pay: a case of constantly moving goalposts, pp. 319-343
  • PEETZ David - Regulation distance, labour segmentation and gender gaps, pp. 345-362
  • GUILLAUME Cécile - Understanding the variations of unions’ litigation strategies to promote equal pay: reflection on the British case, pp. 363-379
  • DEAKIN Simon, BUTLIN Sarah Fraser, McLAUGHLIN Colm, POLANSKA  Aleksandra - Are litigation and collective bargaining complements or substitutes for achieving gender equality? A study of the British Equal Pay Act, pp. 381-403
  • AUSTEN Siobhan, JEFFERSON Therese - Economic analysis, ideology and the public sphere: insights from Australia’s equal remuneration hearings, pp. 405-419
  • CHARLESWORTH Sara, MACDONALD Fiona - Australia’s gender pay equity legislation: how new, how different, what prospects? pp. 421-440
  • PERUZZI Marco - Contradictions and misalignments in the EU approach towards the gender pay gap, pp. 441-465
  • SCHÄFFER Andrea, GOTTSCHALL Karin - From wage regulation to wage gap: how wage-setting institutions and structures shape the gender wage gap across three industries in 24 European countries and Germany, pp. 467-496
  • UGARTE Sebastian M., GRIMSHAW Damian, RUBERY Jill - Gender wage inequality in inclusive and exclusive industrial relations systems: a comparison of Argentina and Chile, pp. 497-535
  • DAVIES Rhys, McNABB Robert, WHITFIELD Keith - Do high-performance work practices exacerbate or mitigate the gender pay gap? pp.  537-564
  • FIGUEIREDO Hugo, ROCHA Vera, BISCAIA Ricardo, TEIXEIRA Pedro - Gender pay gaps and the restructuring of graduate labour markets in Southern Europe, pp. 565-598
  • SCHULZE Ute - The gender wage gap among PhDs in the UK, pp. 599-629
  • O'HIGGINS Niall - Ethnicity and gender in the labour market in Central and South-Eastern Europe, pp. 631-654
  • ERNE Roland, IMBODEN Natalie - Equal pay by gender and by nationality: a comparative analysis of Switzerland’s unequal equal pay policy regimes across time, pp. 655-674

(résumés du n° 2/2015)

Volume 39, n° 1, January 2015

  • LAWSON Tony - The nature of the firm and peculiarities of the corporation, pp. 1-32
  • DOW Sheila C. - Addressing uncertainty in economics and the economy, pp. 33-47
  • CUSMANO Lucia, MORRISON Andrea, PANDOLFO Enrico - Spin-off and clustering: a return to the Marshallian district, pp. 49-66
  • KLIMAN Andrew, WILLIAMS Shannon D. - Why ‘financialisation’ hasn’t depressed US productive investment, pp. 67-92
  • KIM Yun K., SETTERFIELD Mark, MEI Yuan - Aggregate consumption and debt accumulation: an empirical examination of US household behaviour, pp. 93-112
  • CRUZ Moritz - Premature de-industrialisation: theory, evidence and policy recommendations in the Mexican case, pp. 113-137
  • NOGUEIRA Mara, CROCCO Marco, FIGUEIREDO Ana Teresa, DINIZ Gustavo - Financial hierarchy and banking strategies: a regional analysis for the Brazilian case, pp. 139-156
  • CAVERZASI Eugenio, GODIN Antoine - Post-Keynesian stock-flow-consistent modelling: a survey, pp. 157-187
  • NISHI Hiroshi - Comparative evaluation of post-Keynesian interest rate rules, income distribution and firms’ debts for macroeconomic performance, pp. 189-219
  • PALLEY Thomas I. - The middle class in macroeconomics and growth theory: a three-class neo-Kaleckian–Goodwin model, pp. 221-243
  • KIM Kwangsu - Demand and structural change in Adam Smith’s view of economic progress, pp. 245-264
  • ANDREWS David - Natural price and the long run: Alfred Marshall’s misreading of Adam Smith, pp. 265-279
  • PRENDERGAST Renee - Jonathan Swift’s critique of consequentialism? pp. 281-297

 (résumés du n° 1/2015)

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