|
Colleagues, A heterodox job announcement as well as
two book announcements. The position at Fred Lee ********************************************************************************************** Dear Fred, Economics, Visiting Assistant Professor,
Fall 2004-Spring 2005. Ph.D. (or ABD) in Economics to teach undergraduate
courses in introductory economics and General studies. Successful candidate
will have a strong background in teaching undergraduates students. Teaching
load is three courses(12 credit hours per semester). Additional duties as
stipulated by collective bargaining agreement. Salary $42,527 - $46,781.
Salary may be higher depending upon qualifications, experience and increases in
the appropriately established compensation plan. Screening begins immediately
and will continue until position is filled. Send letter of application,
resume, documentation of completion of degree and three letters of reference to
Thomas J. Grites, Interim Dean, Social and Behavioral Sciences, The Richard
Stockton College of New Jersey, AA--,
-- Ellen Mutari, Assistant
Professor General Studies Division (609) 748-6085 (work) We are happy to inform
you that our new book: "Capital
Resurgent. Roots of the Neoliberal Revolution" has now been made available by Harvard University
Press. It is a translation of "Crise et
Sortie de Crise. Ordre et désordres néolibéraux", PUF,
The
New Value Controversy and
the Foundations of Economics edited by Alan Freeman, Andrew
Kliman & Julian Wells Contributors: Paresh
Chattopadhyay, Edward B. Chilcote, W. Paul Cockshott, Paul Cooney, Allin F.
Cottrell, Ann Davis, Massimo De Angelis, Alan Freeman, Rebecca Kalmans, Andrew
Kliman, David Laibman, Ted McGlone, Stavros D. Mavroudeas, Fred Moseley,
Michael Perelman, Alejandro Ramos Martinez, Bruce Roberts, Mario L.
Robles–Baez, and Julian Wells This sequel to Marx and Non-Equilibrium Economics introduces
the key advances in modern value theory. Leading authors with contrasting
theoretical viewpoints debate equilibrium and non-equilibrium approaches,
abstract labour and money, and provide an invaluable introduction to the
rapidly growing body of new work in these fields. The authors cover
cutting-edge topics in value theory including gender and money, crisis theory,
the impact of technology, skilled and complex labour, and the effect of
international transfers of value. All papers concentrate on new research. The
mathematical content is minimal, allowing both active researchers and new
students to introduce themselves to the burgeoning critical reappraisal of the
foundations of Twentieth Century economic thinking. “Marxian value
theory has experienced a new surge of interest, interpretations, and dispute
since the end of the Cold War. A considerable amount of this dispute has
centered on the Temporal Single-System Interpretation (TSSI). This volume
brings together in one place most of the leading participants in these
discussions, … [providing] comprehensive coverage of this debate
…. This is clearly the definitive volume on controversies over Marxian
value theory available at this time.” –– J. Barkley
Rosser, Jr., “This
book assembles – in an impressively undogmatic and theoretically
self-conscious way – an excellent set of mutually engaged articles. Well
chosen to highlight the central claims and debates surrounding them, the
articles document the dramatic recent renewal of Marxian value theories, extend
them provocatively to important issues, and thereby effectively challenge
Marxian economics’ censorious exclusion from the academic
mainstream.” –– Richard
D. Wolff, “This rich set of essays
breathes new life into Marxian economics by demonstrating the range and
veracity of Marx’s theory of value as well as a steadfast commitment to
open dialogue and fair-minded debate on these fundamental issues. As practiced
here, value theory is a vehicle for rigorous analysis and conversation within
and across paradigms. This alone is an enormous contribution to heterodox
economics and to contemporary economics at large, where questions of value are
enduringly central yet rarely discussed in a cogent and pluralistic
manner.” ––
Robert F. Garnett, Ä well focused debate
over the key issue in Marx’s economics by some of the world’s
leading Marxist economists. I can’t think of a better way (or work) to
introduce students to the intricacies of Marx’s value theory and the
controversies it has spawned. Highly recommended!” ––
February 2004
Edward Elgar Publishing 319 + xx pgs.
£69.95 or $110 17 papers +
editors’ introduction, IWGVT
Scholarship Guidelines, bibliography, and index ORDER FROM EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING Glensanda House, Cheltenham, Tel: + 44 (0) 1242 226934 Fax: + 44 (0) 1242 262111 Email: info @e-elgar.co.uk Tel: + 1 413 584 5551 Fax: + 1 413 584 9933 Email: elgarinfo @e-elgar.com www .e-elgar.com ISBN 1-84064-560-1 |
Attachment:
ECON AD ASST PROF 04-05.doc
Description: ECON AD ASST PROF 04-05.doc
- stuff for heterodox economists: Job Opening, conf.,, Lee, Frederic Wed 19 May 2004, 22:10 GMT
- New Book on Value, Drewk Fri 14 May 2004, 14:42 GMT
- Comparative Systems Course, Lee, Frederic Thu 13 May 2004, 20:10 GMT
- Street Scholarship Call for Applicants, Lee, Frederic Tue 11 May 2004, 22:46 GMT
- heterodox job announcement; new books, Lee, Frederic Tue 11 May 2004, 21:47 GMT
- FW: [Hgs] Call for papers: Critical Perspectives on Third WorldDevelopment, Lee, Frederic Tue 11 May 2004, 19:09 GMT
- Honoring Edward J. Nell: Friday May 14, 5:00, Gary Mongiovi Sun 09 May 2004, 17:06 GMT
- Fwd: workshop in Paris, Ric Holt Sat 08 May 2004, 17:18 GMT
- Job Creation and Economic Growth in China, Henry C.K. Liu Mon 03 May 2004, 15:16 GMT