You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
'Alberto Brugnoli and Alessandro Colombo have put together an important collection of essays on government and governance in Italy and Britain. This richly documented comparative study proposes to answer two key questions: how does the change from government to governance emerge, and what enables this transformation to survive and even to displace State-centric solutions to public policy issues? The book will be a milestone in highlighting the distinctive and original role of the principle of subsidiarity, in examining and assessing governance regimes, their philosophy and their organizational choices and in linking subsidiarity with the prospects of freedom, responsibility and self-governin...
The 75th edition of the ACU Yearbook is published at a time of global expansion in higher education. From Australia to Zimbabwe, this internationally acclaimed title keeps you up to date with the changes taking place in the 600 universities of the Commonwealth. The 2000 edition has over 2,500 pages of fully updated facts about these institutions: their academic structure, senior staff, degree programmes and research activities. Much of this data is unique to the Yearbook.
This study examines five decades of Italian economists who studied or researched at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge between the years 1950 and 2000. Providing a detailed list of Italian economists associated with Hicks, Harrod, Bacharach, Flemming, Mirrlees, Sen and other distinguished dons, the authors examine eleven research lines, including the Sraffa and the neo-Ricardian school, the post-Keynesian school and the Stone’s and Goodwin’s schools. Baranzini and Mirante trace the influence of the schools in terms of 1) their fundamental role in the evolution of economic thought; 2) their promotion of four key controversies (on the measurement of technical progress, on capital theory, on income distribution and on the inter-generational transmission of wealth); 3) the counter-flow of Oxbridge scholars to academia in Italy, and 4) the invigoration of a third generation of Italian economists researching or teaching at Oxbridge today. A must-read for all those interested in the way Italian and British research has shaped the study and teaching of economics.
What is the ethical status of market capitalism? This volume brings together a group of academics and policy-makers who provide detailed discussion of some of the key issues at the intersection of economics and ethics.