by Augello
[Front Matter and Foreword by Frederic M. Scherer]: This segment contains the title page, copyright information, and a foreword by Frederic M. Scherer. Scherer highlights Schumpeter's significance as a 20th-century economist, contrasting his dynamic vision of 'creative destruction' and innovation with the static neoclassical synthesis. He introduces Augello's comprehensive bibliography as a vital tool for scholars studying the Schumpeterian tradition, entrepreneurship, and the laws of motion of capitalism. [Table of Contents and Introduction]: The introduction details the origins and methodology of this reference guide. Augello explains the need for a more comprehensive, geographically diverse bibliography that includes Japanese and Eastern European scholarship. He discusses the discovery of unpublished archival materials at Harvard and critiques previous bibliographies by Boody and Schneider. The section also outlines the organizational structure of the book, including its indices and thematic subdivisions. [Abbreviations and Historical Assessment: The Data]: This segment provides a list of abbreviations for Schumpeter's works and countries of publication, followed by a historical assessment of Schumpeterian literature from 1907 to 1989. Augello performs a quantitative analysis of nearly 2,000 entries, identifying major trends, the most reviewed books (like History of Economic Analysis), and the most prolific authors. It includes a comparative table showing how Schumpeter's work is frequently analyzed alongside that of Keynes, Marx, and Weber. [An Overview of Schumpeterian Interpretation]: This section provides a broad overview of the critical literature and interpretive frameworks applied to Schumpeter's work. It highlights the lack of a 'conventional' interpretation, noting the dualistic view that divides his work into an 'Austro-German' stage focused on statics and an 'American' stage focused on business cycles. The author discusses Schumpeter's complex relationship with marginalism, his intellectual debt to the German Historical School and the Austrian School (Menger, Boehm-Bawerk), and comparisons with Marx and Keynes regarding accumulation and dynamic analysis. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Biography]: A detailed survey of biographical literature on Schumpeter, covering his education in the Habsburg Empire, his brief tenure as Austria's Minister of Finance in 1919, and his academic career at Bonn and Harvard. It highlights key commemorative works by colleagues like Haberler and Samuelson, the establishment of the Research Center in Entrepreneurial History, and the development of comprehensive bibliographies of his work. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Methodology]: This section examines the literature regarding Schumpeter's methodological and epistemological positions. Central themes include the distinction between 'analysis' and 'vision', the debate over the stationary state and zero interest rates, and the contrast between statics and dynamics. It traces the evolution of these discussions from early German critiques to modern assessments of Schumpeter as a heterodox thinker and the precursor to evolutionary economics. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Development]: A comprehensive review of the literature on Schumpeter's theory of economic development. It explores the central role of the entrepreneur-innovator, the concept of 'creative destruction', and the relationship between market structure (monopoly vs. competition) and technological change. The section also covers debates on the applicability of Schumpeterian models to less developed countries and the recent rise of 'evolutionary economics' based on his theories. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Money]: This section surveys Schumpeter's monetary thought, emphasizing his rejection of the real/monetary dichotomy. Key topics include his dynamic theory of interest, the role of credit and banks in financing innovation, and the concept of the 'fiscal state'. It notes the increased scholarly interest following the posthumous publication of 'Das Wesen des Geldes' and compares his views with those of Wicksell, Keynes, and the monetarists. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Cycle]: An analysis of the literature regarding Schumpeter's business cycle theory. It discusses his four-phase model (prosperity, recession, depression, recovery) and the integration of multiple cycles (Kitchin, Juglar, Kondratieff). The section highlights the initial cool reception of 'Business Cycles' (1939) due to its heavy statistical nature, but notes a modern revival of interest in 'long waves' and the concept of 'creative destruction' as an explanation for economic instability. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Sociology]: This section reviews Schumpeter's contributions to sociology, particularly his theories on imperialism and social classes. It examines his analysis of the role of intellectuals, the process of bureaucratization, and the sociological foundations of the entrepreneurial function. Comparisons with Weber and Marx are central, focusing on social dynamics and the modernization process in advanced capitalism. [The Schumpeterian Categories: Politics]: A survey of the political themes in Schumpeter's work, primarily centered on 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. It covers his famous 'march into socialism' thesis, his definition of democracy as a competitive method for selecting elites, and his influence on modern political science (e.g., Anthony Downs). The section also discusses the ideological reception of his work by both liberal and Soviet scholars. [The Schumpeterian Categories: History]: The final section examines Schumpeter as a historian of economic thought, focusing on his 'History of Economic Analysis'. It discusses his re-evaluation of the Scholastics, his relationship to the Austrian and Neoclassical schools, and the influence of thinkers like Walras and Marshall on his own framework. It also reviews the critical reception of his historiographical methods by major figures like Viner and Robbins. [Works by Schumpeter: Books and Pamphlets (1908-1939)]: A comprehensive primary bibliography of Schumpeter's books and pamphlets published between 1908 and 1939. It includes major works such as 'The Nature and Essence of Theoretical Economics', 'The Theory of Economic Development', and 'Business Cycles'. The list details various editions, reprints, and international translations in languages including Japanese, Italian, English, French, Spanish, and several others, often noting specific translators and introductory authors. [Works by Schumpeter: Major Books and Posthumous Collections (1942-1989)]: Bibliographical listings for Schumpeter's later works and posthumous collections, most notably 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' and the 'History of Economic Analysis'. It covers numerous international editions and translations, as well as collected essays on economic theory, sociology, and biography edited by figures like Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter, Richard Clemence, and Richard Swedberg. [Works by Schumpeter: Articles, Reports and Book Reviews (1905-1932)]: A detailed chronological list of Schumpeter's shorter works, including journal articles, book reviews, and reports from 1905 to 1932. Key entries include his early papers on mathematical methods, his famous essay 'On the Concept of Social Value', and biographical tributes to economists like Walras, Böhm-Bawerk, and Menger. It also tracks his contributions to the 'Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences' and various German economic journals. [Works by Schumpeter: Articles, Reports and Book Reviews (1933-1951)]: The final section of Schumpeter's article bibliography, covering his American period from 1933 until his death and posthumous releases up to 1951. Highlights include his work on econometrics, his critical reviews of Keynes's 'General Theory', his presidential address 'Science and Ideology', and his influential essays on the 'Creative Response in Economic History' and 'The March into Socialism'. [Works on Schumpeter: 1907-1913 Bibliography]: A chronological bibliography of works published between 1907 and 1913 discussing Joseph Schumpeter's early theories. It includes reviews and critiques of his major early works such as 'Das Wesen und der Hauptinhalt der theoretischen Nationaloekonomie' and 'Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung'. Notable contributors listed include Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, John Bates Clark, Friedrich von Wieser, and Gustav von Schmoller, covering topics like the mathematical method in economics, economic crises, and the dynamic theory of interest. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies 1913-1923]: A chronological bibliography of academic works from 1913 to 1923 discussing or reviewing Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. Key topics include his 'Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung' (Theory of Economic Development), the sociology of imperialism, the crisis of the tax state, and theories of interest and money. The list includes international contributions from the USA, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Switzerland, and the Soviet Union, featuring authors such as B.M. Anderson, G. Del Vecchio, and Franz Oppenheimer. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1923-1928)]: A chronological bibliography of academic works from 1923 to 1928 discussing or critiquing Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. Key topics include his theory of economic development, business cycles, interest (Kapitalzins), and monetary theory. It features critiques and comparative studies by notable economists such as Gottfried Haberler, G.-H. Bousquet, and J.G. Koopmans (comparing Schumpeter and Keynes), as well as several German doctoral dissertations focusing on Schumpeter's methodology and static vs. dynamic systems. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1928-1933)]: This segment contains a chronological bibliography of academic works concerning Joseph Schumpeter published between 1928 and 1933. It includes doctoral dissertations, journal articles, and book reviews in German, French, Italian, English, and Japanese. Key topics covered include Schumpeter's theories of interest, credit, economic development, and the role of the entrepreneur, as well as critical comparisons with other economists like Cassel, Amonn, and Hahn. Notable entries include Lionel Robbins' critique of stationary equilibrium and various international receptions of 'The Theory of Economic Development' (Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung). [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1933-1937)]: A chronological bibliography of works by and about Joseph Schumpeter published between 1933 and 1937. The list includes doctoral dissertations, journal articles, and book reviews in German, Japanese, Italian, English, and French. Key topics covered include the theory of economic development, monetary theory, the distinction between statics and dynamics, business cycle theory, and the role of the entrepreneur. Notable contributors listed include François Perroux, Gottfried Haberler, Alvin Hansen, and Howard Ellis. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1937-1942)]: A chronological bibliography of works by and about Joseph Schumpeter published between 1937 and 1942. This segment includes doctoral dissertations on Schumpeter's theories of business cycles and interest, numerous reviews of his monumental work 'Business Cycles' (1939) by prominent economists like Simon Kuznets, Oskar Lange, and Hans Neisser, and early citations of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. It also covers comparative studies on credit theory (Schumpeter-Hahn) and various international perspectives from Italy, Germany, Japan, and France. [Bibliography of Works on Schumpeter (1942-1946)]: A chronological bibliography of academic reviews and articles concerning Joseph Schumpeter's work published between 1942 and 1946. Major focus is placed on his seminal work 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', with reviews by notable economists such as Joan Robinson, Oskar Lange, and Paul Samuelson. The segment also includes discussions on his theory of innovation, business cycles, and comparisons with Keynesian unemployment theories. International reception is documented through citations from the USA, Great Britain, Sweden, Switzerland, Canada, and Italy. [Bibliography 1946-1947: Reviews and Early Critiques]: A chronological list of publications from 1946 and 1947 concerning Schumpeter's work. It includes numerous reviews of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' in various languages (Japanese, Italian, German, French, English), critiques of his mathematical textbook co-authored with Crum, and comparative studies between Schumpeter and Marx. Notable entries include Salin's introduction to the German edition of Schumpeter's work and Dupriez's extensive study on general economic fluctuations. [Bibliography 1948-1949: Business Cycles and Comparative Theory]: Bibliographic entries from 1948 and 1949 focusing on Schumpeter's theories of interest, business cycles, and the entrepreneur. The segment highlights international scholarship from France, Italy, Japan, and the USA, including discussions on the inevitability of socialism, the 'long-wave' depression of 1873-97, and methodological approaches to quantitative historical analysis in economics. It also includes comparative analyses of structural concepts in the works of Marx and Schumpeter. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Literature (1949)]: A list of academic publications from 1949 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's work and its relation to other thinkers like Marx and Pareto. Topics include economic systems, the theory of interest, sociology, and the comparison between Schumpeter and Georges Tarde. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Literature (1950)]: Bibliographic entries from 1950 documenting works by and about Schumpeter following his death. Includes biographical notes, discussions on his views of capitalism and socialism, his sociological contributions, and specific analyses of his 'dualism' and entrepreneurial theories. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1950): Entries 0242-0263]: A chronological bibliography of academic works published in 1950 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including his theory of profit, the concept of equilibrium, the velocity of money, and his relationship to Walrasian economics. It includes personal reminiscences by Ragnar Frisch, biographical accounts of his tenure as Finance Minister by Gottfried Haberler, and methodological critiques of his 'Business Cycles'. The segment lists publications in French, Spanish, Japanese, German, and English, reflecting the global reception of Schumpeter's work immediately following his death. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1950 (Part 2)]: A continuation of the 1950 bibliographic entries (items 0264-0280) regarding Joseph Schumpeter. This section includes memorials, doctoral dissertations, and theoretical analyses of Schumpeter's work on the entrepreneur, long-duration economic cycles, social classes, and the problem of risk. Notable contributors include Erich Schneider, Arthur Smithies, and David McCord Wright, with several entries in French and Japanese reflecting the international scope of Schumpeterian scholarship immediately following his death. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1951 (Part 1)]: Bibliographic entries for the year 1951 (items 0281-0289). The segment covers reviews and introductions to Schumpeter's posthumous works, including 'Imperialism and Social Classes' and 'Ten Great Economists'. It features significant economic analyses such as William Baumol's 'Economic Dynamics', Edward Chamberlin's critique of the Schumpeterian system in light of monopoly theory, and Japanese reflections on Schumpeter's theory of interest. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1951): Davis to Machlup]: A chronological bibliography of works published in 1951 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. It includes reviews of 'Imperialism and Social Classes' and 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', as well as significant commemorative essays from the 'Schumpeter, Social Scientist' collection edited by S.E. Harris. Key topics covered include Schumpeter's theory of interest, business cycle theory, economic methodology, and his relationship to Wicksellian theory. The list features international contributions from the USA, France, Italy, Spain, Norway, and Japan. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1951): Mainguy to Taylor]: A comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1951 regarding Joseph Schumpeter. The segment includes significant memorial essays and critical reviews of his major works such as 'Ten Great Economists', 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', and 'Imperialism and Social Classes'. Key contributors include Paul Samuelson on Schumpeter's teaching, Arthur Marget on monetary aspects, Edward Mason on monopoly, and various international perspectives from France, Japan, Italy, and the UK. Topics covered range from the dualism in Schumpeterian economics to comparisons with Marx and Keynes, and his theories on innovation and the capitalist process. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1951)]: A list of bibliographic entries from 1951 focusing on Schumpeter's work. Topics include quantitative research in economics, the theory of economic development, sociological economics, political philosophy, and critiques of his theories on imperialism and social classes. Notable contributors include Jan Tinbergen, A.P. Usher, and David McCord Wright. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1952)]: A collection of bibliographic entries from 1952 reviewing and analyzing Schumpeter's posthumous publications and core theories. Significant focus is placed on reviews of 'Ten Great Economists', his business cycle theory, capital formation, and the psychological aspects of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. It includes international perspectives from Japan, Brazil, France, and Germany. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1952)]: A chronological bibliography of works from 1952 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include reviews of 'Imperialism and Social Classes' and 'Ten Great Economists', comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx regarding capital and business cycles, and analyses of his monetary and monopoly theories. Notable contributors include Shigeto Tsuru, R. Koebner, and K. Knorr. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1953)]: A bibliography of publications from 1953 related to Schumpeter's legacy. It includes encyclopedia entries, doctoral dissertations on 'verstehende Nationaloekonomie', and reviews of his collected essays ('Aufsaetze zur oekonomischen Theorie'). The segment also lists Italian translations of his works on economic doctrines and discussions on the relationship between free enterprise and democracy. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1953)]: A collection of bibliographic entries from 1953 regarding Joseph Schumpeter's work. It includes reviews of 'Aufsaetze zur oekonomischen Theorie', 'Imperialism and Social Classes', and 'Ten Great Economists'. Notable entries discuss the fate of capitalism compared to Marx, obstacles to economic development, and the relationship between the Austrian school and the Schumpeterian system. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1954)]: Bibliographic entries from 1954 focusing heavily on the publication and reception of Schumpeter's posthumous 'History of Economic Analysis'. Includes Elizabeth Boody's introduction to the work, reviews by F.A. Hayek and J. Dorfman, and studies on Schumpeterian methodology and business leadership. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1954-1955): Entries 0420-0447]: A comprehensive bibliographic listing of reviews and scholarly works concerning Joseph Schumpeter published between 1954 and 1955. The segment includes numerous international reviews of Schumpeter's posthumous 'History of Economic Analysis' and 'Economic Doctrine and Method' by prominent economists such as Jacob Viner, George Stigler, and H.G. Johnson. It also features comparative studies between Schumpeter and Marx regarding capitalist development and economic cycles, as well as doctoral dissertations and articles in English, Italian, Japanese, French, and German. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1955) - Part 1]: A collection of bibliographic entries from 1955 regarding Joseph Schumpeter's work. It includes reviews and analyses of 'History of Economic Analysis', 'Ten Great Economists', and 'Imperialism and Social Classes'. Key topics covered include general equilibrium, cycle theory, capitalist development, and entrepreneurship, with contributions from notable scholars like Knight, Kuznets, Robbins, and Hobsbawm. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1955-1956 (Entries 0475-0501)]: This segment contains a chronological bibliography of works from 1955 and 1956 related to Joseph Schumpeter. It includes numerous reviews and critical assessments of his posthumous 'History of Economic Analysis' and 'Economic Doctrine and Method'. Key topics covered in these entries include Schumpeter's theories on technical change, capital formation, the role of the entrepreneur, and comparisons between Schumpeterian and Keynesian models. The bibliography also lists sociological and methodological critiques, as well as discussions of his influence on the German historical school (Schmoller, Sombart) and development economics. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1956-1957)]: A chronological bibliography of academic works from 1956 and 1957 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The list includes reviews of his major works like 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' and 'History of Economic Analysis' in various languages (Italian, Japanese, German, English). Key themes covered in these entries include the Schumpeterian entrepreneur, the relationship between Schumpeter and other economists like Marx and Keynes, scholastic economics, and the application of his theories to democracy and industrial concentration. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1957-1958)]: This segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works from 1957 and 1958 focused on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and sociological theories. Key topics include critiques of his 'History of Economic Analysis', his dynamic theory of monopoly, the concept of innovation, and his theories on imperialism and the decline of capitalism. The entries cover international scholarship from the USA, Japan, Italy, Germany, and France, featuring authors such as Ronald Meek, T. Yasui, and F.K. Mann. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1958-1959]: A comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1958 and 1959 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of international scholarship in Japanese, Polish, German, English, Spanish, French, Italian, and Russian. Key topics include analyses of Schumpeter's 'Theory of Economic Development', 'History of Economic Analysis', and 'Business Cycles', as well as discussions on the crisis of capitalism, the role of entrepreneurs versus managers, and comparisons with other thinkers like Keynes and Burnham. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1959-1960]: A chronological bibliographic listing of academic works from 1959 and 1960 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including his theories on innovation and technological change compared with Usher, the future of capitalism, monopoly theory, and the relationship between economic theory and history. It includes international perspectives from the USA, Japan, Italy, Germany, and Poland, featuring reviews of 'History of Economic Analysis' and discussions on his sociological contributions and theories of socialism. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1960]: A collection of bibliographic entries from 1960 focusing on Schumpeter's theories. Topics include comparisons between Schumpeter and Keynes on entrepreneurial expectations, the application of development theory to non-market economies, business cycle analysis, and the relationship between Schumpeterian and Institutionalist theories. It also includes reviews of the Italian edition of 'History of Economic Analysis'. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1961]: Bibliographic entries from 1961 regarding Schumpeter's work. Key themes include the theory of innovation and autodeflation, comparative studies of imperialism (Schumpeter vs. Kautsky), Schumpeter's views on socialism and economic calculation, and his connection to the metallist tradition in monetary history. Includes references to the Brazilian edition of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1961-1962)]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works from 1961 and 1962 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his theories on economic development, money and distribution, the role of the entrepreneur compared to Max Weber's charisma, and critiques of his views on monopoly and imperialism. It includes international contributions in Japanese, Italian, German, French, Polish, and Russian, as well as specific references to the catalog of the Schumpeter Library at Hitotsubashi University. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1962-1964]: A chronological bibliography of academic works concerning Joseph Schumpeter published between 1962 and 1964. The listings include international perspectives from Japan, the Soviet Union, Italy, Germany, and the USA, covering topics such as his theories of interest, credit, and capital; the 'self-destruction of capitalism'; comparisons with Karl Marx; and his analysis of business cycles and economic development. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1964-1965)]: This segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works published in 1964 and 1965 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparative studies between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Max Weber and John Maynard Keynes, analyses of his theories on interest, profit, and business cycles, and explorations of his sociological perspectives. It also includes citations regarding market structure, innovation, and the history of economic analysis, with a significant number of Japanese and German language entries. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1966)]: A list of academic publications from 1966 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's work. Topics include the Japanese translation of 'History of Economic Analysis', capital formation in developing countries, comparisons between Schumpeter and Max Weber, theories of innovation and business cycles, and comparisons of profit concepts between Keynes and Schumpeter. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1967)]: A list of academic publications from 1967 regarding Schumpeterian theory. Key entries cover democratic elitism, innovation theory, the transfer of technology to developing countries, theories of imperialism, and innovation within the framework of monopolistic competition. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1967-1968)]: A comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1967 and 1968 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx or Lenin, theories of the entrepreneur, monopolistic competition, the history of economic analysis, and the role of technological innovation in economic growth. It includes international contributions in German, Polish, Japanese, Italian, and French, alongside English-language publications from major academic presses. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1968-1970]: A chronological bibliographic list of academic works concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter published between 1968 and 1970. The entries cover a wide range of international scholarship in English, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, German, and Dutch. Key topics include Schumpeter's theories on innovation, entrepreneurship, economic dynamics, and his seminal work 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. Notable contributors listed include W.F. Stolper, Paul Samuelson, and Paolo Sylos Labini, with several entries focusing on the scientific character of Schumpeterian theory and its relationship to Weberian and Marxist systems. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1970-1971 (Entries 0786-0809)]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1970 and early 1971 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include the relationship between Schumpeterian and Marxian economics, the sociological aspects of entrepreneurship, the nature of money, and comparisons between Schumpeter and Max Weber. Notable contributors include Paul Samuelson, Erich Schneider, and F.K. Mann. The entries cover diverse international perspectives including German, Japanese, Italian, and American scholarship. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies 1971]: A comprehensive list of academic publications from 1971 (and one from 1972) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including his theory of business cycles, his relationship to thinkers like Marx, Weber, and Keynes, his views on entrepreneurship and economic development, and specific critiques of his monetary theory and zero interest rate paradox. The bibliography includes international contributions in Spanish, Italian, German, and Japanese. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies 1972 (Partial)]: Start of the 1972 bibliographic entries, beginning with a critique of Marxist theories of imperialism in relation to Schumpeterian thought. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1972)]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1972 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his theories on economic development, imperialism, and social classes, as well as comparative studies with Karl Marx and J.M. Keynes. It includes international contributions in Italian, German, French, Japanese, and English, featuring authors such as T. Cozzi, D.P. Moynihan, and I. Nakayama. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1972-1974]: A chronological bibliography of academic works from 1972 to 1974 focused on Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include his theories on social classes, imperialism, the role of the entrepreneur, and credit creation. The list features comparative studies between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Veblen, Weber, and Mosca, as well as analyses of his views on democracy, capitalism, and the 'long waves' of economic development. It includes international entries in English, German, Japanese, Italian, French, and Dutch. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1974)]: A list of academic publications from 1974 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter. Topics include his business cycle models, critiques of his theory of transformation, firm size and innovation, sociology of imperialism, and comparative studies with Max Weber. It includes biographical entries from the Dictionary of American Biography and Webster's American Biographies. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1975)]: A list of academic publications from 1975 regarding Schumpeter's work. Key entries cover reconsiderations of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', comparisons between Keynesian and Schumpeterian systems, surveys of market structure and innovation, and his methodology regarding economic reality. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1975-1976)]: A bibliographic list of academic publications from 1975 and 1976 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Topics include the transition from domain to tax states, entrepreneurship, Kondratieff cycles, the relationship between Schumpeterian and Post-Keynesian systems, and his theories on imperialism and economic development. It includes entries in English, Japanese, German, French, and Italian, featuring works by authors such as Rostow, Bottomore, Samuelson, and Lachmann. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1976-1977)]: A chronological list of academic publications from late 1976 and 1977 regarding Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including the origins of innovation theory in Weber and Schumpeter, comparative studies with Veblen on imperialism, the crisis of the tax state, competitive democracy, and simulations of Schumpeterian competition. It includes international contributions in Polish, Serbo-Croatian, Italian, German, Japanese, and Portuguese. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1978 Header)]: Header for the year 1978 in the chronological bibliography of Schumpeterian literature. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1978]: A comprehensive list of academic publications from 1978 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and sociological theories. Topics include his relationship with Italian economic thought during the Great Depression, comparisons with Keynes and Adam Smith, his conception of the entrepreneur, and analyses of his works on capitalism, socialism, and democracy. The bibliography covers international perspectives from Italy, Germany, Japan, the USA, and the Soviet Union. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1979 (Part 1)]: Initial entries for the year 1979 in the Schumpeterian bibliography. Entries cover the rediscovery of the entrepreneur in economic policy discussions, Schumpeter's theories on economic growth and development, technical discussions on interest rates in steady-state models, and the contribution of business history to economic theory. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1979): Entries 0994-1021]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1979 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including the Schumpeterian hypothesis on market adjustment, modern Austrian capital theory, the Kondratieff cycle, and the role of the entrepreneur in economic development. It includes comparative studies between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Keynes, Schmoller, Elias, and Menger, as well as international perspectives from Japan, Italy, Germany, and the USA. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1979-1980 (Entries 1022-1048)]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1979 and 1980 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's theories. Topics include comparative studies between Marx and Schumpeter on creative destruction and growth economics, the relationship between firm size and innovation (the Schumpeterian hypothesis), business cycle theory, and the sociology of imperialism. The segment includes international citations from the USA, Japan, Italy, Spain, and Hungary, covering dissertations, journal articles, and book introductions. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1980]: A collection of bibliographic entries from 1980 focusing on Schumpeter's theories of innovation, capitalism, and economic development. Notable topics include comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx regarding falling profit rates, the survival of capitalism (Scitovsky), and the relationship between entrepreneurship and bureaucratization. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1981]: A collection of bibliographic entries from 1981 examining Schumpeter's legacy. Key themes include the 'Schumpeterian Renaissance', the decline of capitalism, and his views on corporatism and monetarism. It features contributions to the 40th-anniversary assessment of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' by authors like Bottomore and Fellner. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1981)]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1981 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The segment includes entries on entrepreneurship, social change, and the 40th-anniversary retrospective of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. Key contributors listed include J.K. Galbraith, Gottfried Haberler, Robert Heilbroner, and Paul Samuelson. Topics span from Schumpeterian dynamics and innovation models to his forecasts on socialism and comparisons with thinkers like Hayek and Roepke. The entries cover international perspectives from the USA, Japan, Netherlands, Austria, and Scandinavia. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1981-1982)]: This segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works from 1981 and 1982 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and social theories. Key topics include the crisis of capitalism, structural changes, the rationality postulate in economics, technological paradigms, and comparative economic systems. It features contributions from scholars such as Bronfenbrenner, Dahmen, and Dosi, covering diverse perspectives including Sovietological views and neo-Schumpeterian analyses of industrial development. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies (1982, Freeman to Nelson & Winter)]: A comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1982 (with some 1981-1982 entries) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include the economics of industrial innovation, the decay of capitalism, Schumpeterian dynamics, market structure, and the role of the entrepreneur. Notable entries include Nelson and Winter's 'An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change' and various contributions to the 'Schumpeterian Economics' collection edited by H. Frisch. The list covers international perspectives from the USA, UK, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Switzerland. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1982)]: A comprehensive list of academic publications from 1982 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter. Topics include the relationship between business cycles and growth, Schumpeter's role as a historian of economic thought, comparisons with Gandhian economics, and his theories on innovation and socialism. Notable contributors include Paul Samuelson, Wolfgang Stolper, and Paul Sweezy. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1983)]: Bibliographic entries from 1983, many of which commemorate the centenary of Schumpeter's birth. The collection includes comparisons between Marx and Schumpeter, analyses of Schumpeter's influence in Spain, and studies on his theories of interest, innovation, and competition. It also features works discussing his relationship with Boehm-Bawerk and the 'Schumpeterian revival' in industrial economics. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1983): Balabkins to Claasen]: A chronological bibliography of works published in 1983 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his relationship to Marx and Keynes, the entrepreneurial function, his analysis of Ricardo, fiscal crisis, and economic methodology. It includes international contributions in English, Italian, French, Spanish, and German, featuring authors such as M. Blaug, R. Barre, A. Barrere, and R. Bellofiore. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1205-1229 (1983)]: A bibliographic list of academic works published in 1983 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include the Schumpeterian foundations of Anthony Downs's economic theory of democracy, comparisons between Schumpeter and Keynes regarding interest and economic systems, and Schumpeter's relationship with Karl Marx. The segment also covers biographical entries, his role as Finance Minister, and specific analyses of his theories on money, credit, cycles, and technical change. Works are listed in English, Italian, Japanese, and French. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1983 (Items 1230-1255)]: A bibliographic list of academic works published in 1983 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of international scholarship, including comparisons between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; studies on innovation and long-term business cycles; and Schumpeter's influence on Spanish and Japanese economic thought. Key themes include the centenary of his birth, his theories on economic development, and his relationship with other major thinkers like Marshall, Weber, and Hayek. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (Jensen to Messori)]: A continuation of the comprehensive bibliography of works by and about Joseph Schumpeter, primarily from 1982 and 1983. This segment includes academic papers, journal articles, and books in English, Japanese, Italian, German, and Spanish. Key themes covered include Schumpeter's sociology of knowledge, his relationship to other economists like Marx, Keynes, Mitchell, and Walras, and specific topics such as imperialism, business cycles, entrepreneurship, and the future of capitalism. It also lists several Japanese contributions from the 'Schumpeter saihakken' (Schumpeter Rediscovered) collection and biographical works by Eduard Maerz. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1280-1303]: A bibliographic list of academic publications from 1983 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. The entries cover a wide range of topics including monetary theory, the relationship between credit and innovation, comparisons with Marx and Keynes, the structure of large-scale enterprises (contrasted with Galbraith), and the future of the capitalist system. The segment includes international contributions in Italian, Japanese, Spanish, German, and English, highlighting the global centenary interest in Schumpeter's work. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1304-1328]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1983 (entries 1304 to 1328) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparisons between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; his relationship with the Austrian School and Friedrich von Wieser; theories of innovation and long waves; entrepreneurship; and his views on the decline of capitalist civilization. The list includes international contributions in English, Japanese, Italian, German, and Spanish. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1983): Stolper to Yagi]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works from 1983 focusing on Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The segment includes international contributions from the USA, Japan, Italy, Spain, and Germany, covering topics such as technological innovation, the comparison between Schumpeter and other major economists (Marx, Keynes, Hayek, and Hilferding), and his influence on economic development, democracy, and the theory of imperialism. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1983 (Continued)]: This segment continues the 1983 bibliographic listings of works related to Joseph Schumpeter. It includes Japanese scholarship on Schumpeter's social science theory and historical approaches, comparisons between Weber and Schumpeter, and studies on the nonprofit sector, economic analysis in Central Europe, and the relevance of Schumpeterian political economy to monetary policy. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1984]: A comprehensive list of publications from 1984 focusing on Schumpeterian economics. Key themes include Schumpeter as a sociologist and historian of economic doctrine, the relationship between innovation and firm size, Japanese entrepreneurship, and comparative studies involving Marx, Keynes, and Hayek. It also lists significant centennial collections and bibliographic reviews of Schumpeter's critical acclaim. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies (1376-1398)]: A bibliographic list of academic works published in 1984 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx, Weber, Keynes, and Marshall. Topics covered include the differentiation of entrepreneurs from small business owners, the Austrian theory of capital and interest, business cycle analysis, theories of imperialism, and the 'competitive' theory of democracy. The segment includes dissertations, journal articles, and conference papers from international sources (USA, Italy, Brazil, Netherlands, UK, Japan, Canada). [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies (1399-1422)]: A bibliographic list of academic works (entries 1399-1422) published primarily in 1984 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparative analyses between Schumpeter and other major economists like Keynes, Marx, and Hayek; the role of the entrepreneur and innovation in economic development; business cycle theory including 'long waves'; and Schumpeter's sociological perspectives on the 'crisis of the tax state' and the future of capitalism. The entries cover international scholarship in German, Italian, English, French, Hungarian, and Japanese. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1984): Levin to Parker]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1984 concerning Joseph Schumpeter's economic and social theories. Key topics include R&D and market structure (Levin and Reiss), the role of the entrepreneur (Loasby, Meyer, Nelson), business cycles (Low), and comparisons between Schumpeter and other major thinkers like Keynes and Marx (Meissner, Neumann, Neumark, Onorati). The segment also covers specific analyses of Schumpeter's monetary theory, his relationship with econometrics (Minotani), and his influence on Public Choice theory (Mitchell). [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1984): Pascual to Seidl]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1984 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparative studies of Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; technological innovation and long wave theory; the role of the entrepreneur; and the history of economic analysis. Notable contributors include F.M. Scherer, C. Seidl, and D. Patinkin, covering international perspectives from Italy, India, Germany, and the United States. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1984): Semmler to Ursprung]: This segment contains a bibliographic list of secondary works on Joseph Schumpeter published primarily in 1984. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparisons between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; the role of the entrepreneur in modern theory; Schumpeter's monetary and business cycle theories; and his influence on political science and economic policy. Notable authors listed include W.F. Stolper, P. Sylos Labini, G. Tichy, and Y. Shionoya, with works appearing in various languages including English, German, Japanese, and Italian. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1984 (Continued)]: A continuation of the 1984 bibliographic entries (items 1495-1502) regarding Schumpeter's influence. Topics include the structural instability of capitalism compared with Marx and Keynes, theories of imperialism, innovation in the chemical industry, and Schumpeterian competition within alternative technological regimes. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1985]: Bibliographic entries for the year 1985 (items 1503-1516). The collection covers diverse Schumpeterian themes including fiscal sociology (linking Schumpeter to Ibn Khaldun), reexaminations of the theory of interest, the relationship between microeconomic rationality and macroeconomic circulation, and comparisons between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Wicksell and Schaeffle. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies (1517-1538)]: A bibliographic list of academic works published in 1985 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparative studies with Marx and Keynes, theories of interest and money, the role of the entrepreneur, public finance, and democratic elitism. Notable contributors include Mark Blaug, Peter Drucker, and various Italian scholars from the 'Società sviluppo impresa' collection edited by Filippini and Porta. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1539-1564)]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1985 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and social theories. Key themes include comparative studies between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; the Austrian intellectual tradition in exile; Schumpeterian methodology; theories of innovation and R&D; and his perspectives on imperialism and the transition to socialism. The segment includes international citations from the UK, Italy, USA, Japan, France, and Germany. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies (Leroux to Riha)]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1985 (entries 1565 to 1588) focusing on Schumpeterian theory. Key topics include the relationship between Schumpeter and political parties, R&D and market structure, comparisons with Marx and Keynes, the role of the entrepreneur in post-industrial society, long wave theory, and Schumpeter's monetary and sociological perspectives. The segment includes several contributions from the Italian collection 'Società sviluppo impresa. Saggi su Schumpeter' and the French collection 'L’étérodoxie dans la pensée économique'. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1985)]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1985 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including comparative studies with Marx and Keynes, the process of creative destruction, stochastic games, regional structural change, and Schumpeter's theories on imperialism and political phenomena. It includes dissertations, journal articles, and book chapters in English, French, Italian, German, and Japanese. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1986)]: Bibliographic entries from 1986 focusing on Schumpeter's relationship with neoclassical economics, his impact on macroeconomics, and comparative analyses between Marshallian and Schumpeterian theories of economic evolution (gradualism vs. punctualism). [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1986): Blaug to Helburn]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1986 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's influence on economic and social theory. Key topics include the history of entrepreneurship, Kondratieff waves, the relationship between Schumpeterian analysis and Marxism/Keynesianism, and the emigration of Austrian economists. It features entries from notable scholars such as Mark Blaug, Martin Bronfenbrenner, and Richard Goodwin, covering diverse subjects from industrial targeting to the 'Leviathan' view of government. [Bibliography: Schumpeterian Studies 1639-1665 (1986)]: A bibliographic list of academic works from 1986 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories and their relationship to Marx and Keynes. Topics covered include venture capitalism, organizational entrepreneurship, innovation policy in open economies, technological unemployment, and the evolution of social science. The segment includes international perspectives from the USA, Great Britain, Japan, the Soviet Union, Italy, and Austria, featuring notable scholars such as Hyman Minsky, Israel Kirzner, and Ludwig Lachmann. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1986): Morsink to Wagener and Drukker]: A bibliographic list of academic works published in 1986 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including the 'long wave' theory, comparative studies between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes, the influence of Marshall and Walras on Schumpeterian thought, and the role of the entrepreneur in modern economic theory. Specific works address technical change, market competition in recently industrialized economies, and the history of the Viennese School of economics. Notable contributors include Rosenberg, Rothschild, Schefold, and Shionoya. [Bibliography: 1986 (Continued)]: A continuation of the 1986 bibliographic entries regarding Schumpeter. Topics include Walras' theory of the entrepreneur, studies on the Austrian school, the development of monetary theory in Austria (comparing Mises, Schumpeter, and Hilferding), and comparative analyses of Marx and Schumpeter from a Post-Keynesian perspective. [Bibliography: 1987]: Bibliographic entries from 1987 focusing on Schumpeterian themes. Key topics include the relationship between innovation and firm size, the concept of creative destruction, antitrust policy, evolutionary approaches to economic growth, and Schumpeter's methodology in his 'History of Economic Analysis'. It also covers his theories on credit, capital, interest, and the diffusion of information technology. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1987): Hazlett to Osterhammel]: A comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1987 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The segment covers diverse topics including property rights in monopoly theory, experimental markets, the history of economic thought, innovation patterns, and the obsolescence of the entrepreneur. It includes international contributions in English, German, French, Italian, and Japanese, featuring comparative studies with thinkers like Marx, Weber, and Keynes, as well as specific analyses of Schumpeter's 'Socialism, Capitalism and Democracy'. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1987)]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1987 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his theories on credit and money, the role of the entrepreneur, comparisons with Marx and Keynes, technological innovation, and methodological individualism. It includes doctoral dissertations, journal articles, and edited volumes from various international perspectives including American, German, Italian, and Japanese scholarship. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1987-1988)]: A continuation of the comprehensive bibliography of works by and about Joseph Alois Schumpeter, covering the end of 1987 and a significant portion of 1988. The entries include books, journal articles, dissertations, and conference papers from various international sources (Italy, USA, Portugal, Netherlands, India, France, Great Britain, Denmark, China, and Germany). Key themes include evolutionary economics, the theory of democracy, technological innovation, firm size, and comparative analyses with other economists like Ricardo and Galbraith. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1988), Items 1798-1824]: This segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works from 1988 focused on Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. Key themes include the relationship between Walras, Schumpeter, and Keynes; evolutionary economics; the role of government in industrial societies; innovation patterns in Japan; and the debate over Say's Law. It lists papers from the second world congress of the International Schumpeter Society and various international journals in Italian, English, French, Japanese, and Korean. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1988): Moss to Stolper]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1988 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The segment includes diverse international contributions (USA, Japan, Germany, Italy, France) covering topics such as the 'tax state', evolutionary approaches to inflation, the concept of creative destruction, and Schumpeter's relationship with other thinkers like Weber and Schmoller. Notable entries include works by Richard Musgrave on fiscal pressure, F.M. Scherer on microeconomics and managerial behavior, and Yoshiro Shionoya's methodological analyses. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1988 (Continued)]: A continuation of the 1988 bibliographic entries (items 1850-1859) focusing on evolutionary economics, Schumpeterian financing, and the 'Tax State'. Includes works by Stolper, Valentino, and Zimmermann, many of which were published in Hanusch's 'Evolutionary Economics' or presented at the International Schumpeter Society congress. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies: 1989]: Bibliographic entries for the year 1989 (items 1860-1876). This section features comparative studies between Schumpeter and Keynes, the unpublished introduction to Schumpeter's 'History of Economic Analysis', and explorations of the Austrian tradition. Key contributors include Allen, Boehm, Bottomore, and the editors of 'Schumpeter et Keynes, ou les dynamiques du capitalisme'. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1989)]: A comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1989 (and some forthcoming) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparisons between Schumpeter and Keynes, theories of long waves and technical change, the role of the entrepreneur, Schumpeter's influence on Italian economic thought, and his theories on imperialism and money. Key contributors listed include C. Freeman, R.M. Goodwin, A. Graziani, and T.W. Hutchison. [Bibliography of Schumpeterian Studies (1989-1990)]: Final entries of the chronological bibliography (items 1901-1916) covering works published or forthcoming in 1989-1990. Topics include Schumpeter's relationship to Keynes, Weber, and Schmoller, as well as economic sociology, instrumentalism, and the role of government. [Author Index]: A comprehensive alphabetical index of authors cited throughout the bibliography, ranging from A (Abe, G.) to Z (Zwiedineck-Suedenhorst). Each entry lists the corresponding entry numbers from the main bibliography. [Subject Index]: A detailed subject index for the bibliography, categorizing Schumpeterian themes, concepts, and historical contexts. It includes cross-references to Schumpeter's specific works (e.g., CSD for Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy) and major economic topics like creative destruction, fiscal state, and the history of economic thought.
This segment contains the title page, copyright information, and a foreword by Frederic M. Scherer. Scherer highlights Schumpeter's significance as a 20th-century economist, contrasting his dynamic vision of 'creative destruction' and innovation with the static neoclassical synthesis. He introduces Augello's comprehensive bibliography as a vital tool for scholars studying the Schumpeterian tradition, entrepreneurship, and the laws of motion of capitalism.
Read full textThe introduction details the origins and methodology of this reference guide. Augello explains the need for a more comprehensive, geographically diverse bibliography that includes Japanese and Eastern European scholarship. He discusses the discovery of unpublished archival materials at Harvard and critiques previous bibliographies by Boody and Schneider. The section also outlines the organizational structure of the book, including its indices and thematic subdivisions.
Read full textThis segment provides a list of abbreviations for Schumpeter's works and countries of publication, followed by a historical assessment of Schumpeterian literature from 1907 to 1989. Augello performs a quantitative analysis of nearly 2,000 entries, identifying major trends, the most reviewed books (like History of Economic Analysis), and the most prolific authors. It includes a comparative table showing how Schumpeter's work is frequently analyzed alongside that of Keynes, Marx, and Weber.
Read full textThis section provides a broad overview of the critical literature and interpretive frameworks applied to Schumpeter's work. It highlights the lack of a 'conventional' interpretation, noting the dualistic view that divides his work into an 'Austro-German' stage focused on statics and an 'American' stage focused on business cycles. The author discusses Schumpeter's complex relationship with marginalism, his intellectual debt to the German Historical School and the Austrian School (Menger, Boehm-Bawerk), and comparisons with Marx and Keynes regarding accumulation and dynamic analysis.
Read full textA detailed survey of biographical literature on Schumpeter, covering his education in the Habsburg Empire, his brief tenure as Austria's Minister of Finance in 1919, and his academic career at Bonn and Harvard. It highlights key commemorative works by colleagues like Haberler and Samuelson, the establishment of the Research Center in Entrepreneurial History, and the development of comprehensive bibliographies of his work.
Read full textThis section examines the literature regarding Schumpeter's methodological and epistemological positions. Central themes include the distinction between 'analysis' and 'vision', the debate over the stationary state and zero interest rates, and the contrast between statics and dynamics. It traces the evolution of these discussions from early German critiques to modern assessments of Schumpeter as a heterodox thinker and the precursor to evolutionary economics.
Read full textA comprehensive review of the literature on Schumpeter's theory of economic development. It explores the central role of the entrepreneur-innovator, the concept of 'creative destruction', and the relationship between market structure (monopoly vs. competition) and technological change. The section also covers debates on the applicability of Schumpeterian models to less developed countries and the recent rise of 'evolutionary economics' based on his theories.
Read full textThis section surveys Schumpeter's monetary thought, emphasizing his rejection of the real/monetary dichotomy. Key topics include his dynamic theory of interest, the role of credit and banks in financing innovation, and the concept of the 'fiscal state'. It notes the increased scholarly interest following the posthumous publication of 'Das Wesen des Geldes' and compares his views with those of Wicksell, Keynes, and the monetarists.
Read full textAn analysis of the literature regarding Schumpeter's business cycle theory. It discusses his four-phase model (prosperity, recession, depression, recovery) and the integration of multiple cycles (Kitchin, Juglar, Kondratieff). The section highlights the initial cool reception of 'Business Cycles' (1939) due to its heavy statistical nature, but notes a modern revival of interest in 'long waves' and the concept of 'creative destruction' as an explanation for economic instability.
Read full textThis section reviews Schumpeter's contributions to sociology, particularly his theories on imperialism and social classes. It examines his analysis of the role of intellectuals, the process of bureaucratization, and the sociological foundations of the entrepreneurial function. Comparisons with Weber and Marx are central, focusing on social dynamics and the modernization process in advanced capitalism.
Read full textA survey of the political themes in Schumpeter's work, primarily centered on 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. It covers his famous 'march into socialism' thesis, his definition of democracy as a competitive method for selecting elites, and his influence on modern political science (e.g., Anthony Downs). The section also discusses the ideological reception of his work by both liberal and Soviet scholars.
Read full textThe final section examines Schumpeter as a historian of economic thought, focusing on his 'History of Economic Analysis'. It discusses his re-evaluation of the Scholastics, his relationship to the Austrian and Neoclassical schools, and the influence of thinkers like Walras and Marshall on his own framework. It also reviews the critical reception of his historiographical methods by major figures like Viner and Robbins.
Read full textA comprehensive primary bibliography of Schumpeter's books and pamphlets published between 1908 and 1939. It includes major works such as 'The Nature and Essence of Theoretical Economics', 'The Theory of Economic Development', and 'Business Cycles'. The list details various editions, reprints, and international translations in languages including Japanese, Italian, English, French, Spanish, and several others, often noting specific translators and introductory authors.
Read full textBibliographical listings for Schumpeter's later works and posthumous collections, most notably 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' and the 'History of Economic Analysis'. It covers numerous international editions and translations, as well as collected essays on economic theory, sociology, and biography edited by figures like Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter, Richard Clemence, and Richard Swedberg.
Read full textA detailed chronological list of Schumpeter's shorter works, including journal articles, book reviews, and reports from 1905 to 1932. Key entries include his early papers on mathematical methods, his famous essay 'On the Concept of Social Value', and biographical tributes to economists like Walras, Böhm-Bawerk, and Menger. It also tracks his contributions to the 'Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences' and various German economic journals.
Read full textThe final section of Schumpeter's article bibliography, covering his American period from 1933 until his death and posthumous releases up to 1951. Highlights include his work on econometrics, his critical reviews of Keynes's 'General Theory', his presidential address 'Science and Ideology', and his influential essays on the 'Creative Response in Economic History' and 'The March into Socialism'.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of works published between 1907 and 1913 discussing Joseph Schumpeter's early theories. It includes reviews and critiques of his major early works such as 'Das Wesen und der Hauptinhalt der theoretischen Nationaloekonomie' and 'Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung'. Notable contributors listed include Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, John Bates Clark, Friedrich von Wieser, and Gustav von Schmoller, covering topics like the mathematical method in economics, economic crises, and the dynamic theory of interest.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic works from 1913 to 1923 discussing or reviewing Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. Key topics include his 'Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung' (Theory of Economic Development), the sociology of imperialism, the crisis of the tax state, and theories of interest and money. The list includes international contributions from the USA, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Switzerland, and the Soviet Union, featuring authors such as B.M. Anderson, G. Del Vecchio, and Franz Oppenheimer.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic works from 1923 to 1928 discussing or critiquing Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. Key topics include his theory of economic development, business cycles, interest (Kapitalzins), and monetary theory. It features critiques and comparative studies by notable economists such as Gottfried Haberler, G.-H. Bousquet, and J.G. Koopmans (comparing Schumpeter and Keynes), as well as several German doctoral dissertations focusing on Schumpeter's methodology and static vs. dynamic systems.
Read full textThis segment contains a chronological bibliography of academic works concerning Joseph Schumpeter published between 1928 and 1933. It includes doctoral dissertations, journal articles, and book reviews in German, French, Italian, English, and Japanese. Key topics covered include Schumpeter's theories of interest, credit, economic development, and the role of the entrepreneur, as well as critical comparisons with other economists like Cassel, Amonn, and Hahn. Notable entries include Lionel Robbins' critique of stationary equilibrium and various international receptions of 'The Theory of Economic Development' (Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung).
Read full textA chronological bibliography of works by and about Joseph Schumpeter published between 1933 and 1937. The list includes doctoral dissertations, journal articles, and book reviews in German, Japanese, Italian, English, and French. Key topics covered include the theory of economic development, monetary theory, the distinction between statics and dynamics, business cycle theory, and the role of the entrepreneur. Notable contributors listed include François Perroux, Gottfried Haberler, Alvin Hansen, and Howard Ellis.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of works by and about Joseph Schumpeter published between 1937 and 1942. This segment includes doctoral dissertations on Schumpeter's theories of business cycles and interest, numerous reviews of his monumental work 'Business Cycles' (1939) by prominent economists like Simon Kuznets, Oskar Lange, and Hans Neisser, and early citations of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. It also covers comparative studies on credit theory (Schumpeter-Hahn) and various international perspectives from Italy, Germany, Japan, and France.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic reviews and articles concerning Joseph Schumpeter's work published between 1942 and 1946. Major focus is placed on his seminal work 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', with reviews by notable economists such as Joan Robinson, Oskar Lange, and Paul Samuelson. The segment also includes discussions on his theory of innovation, business cycles, and comparisons with Keynesian unemployment theories. International reception is documented through citations from the USA, Great Britain, Sweden, Switzerland, Canada, and Italy.
Read full textA chronological list of publications from 1946 and 1947 concerning Schumpeter's work. It includes numerous reviews of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' in various languages (Japanese, Italian, German, French, English), critiques of his mathematical textbook co-authored with Crum, and comparative studies between Schumpeter and Marx. Notable entries include Salin's introduction to the German edition of Schumpeter's work and Dupriez's extensive study on general economic fluctuations.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1948 and 1949 focusing on Schumpeter's theories of interest, business cycles, and the entrepreneur. The segment highlights international scholarship from France, Italy, Japan, and the USA, including discussions on the inevitability of socialism, the 'long-wave' depression of 1873-97, and methodological approaches to quantitative historical analysis in economics. It also includes comparative analyses of structural concepts in the works of Marx and Schumpeter.
Read full textA list of academic publications from 1949 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's work and its relation to other thinkers like Marx and Pareto. Topics include economic systems, the theory of interest, sociology, and the comparison between Schumpeter and Georges Tarde.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1950 documenting works by and about Schumpeter following his death. Includes biographical notes, discussions on his views of capitalism and socialism, his sociological contributions, and specific analyses of his 'dualism' and entrepreneurial theories.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic works published in 1950 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including his theory of profit, the concept of equilibrium, the velocity of money, and his relationship to Walrasian economics. It includes personal reminiscences by Ragnar Frisch, biographical accounts of his tenure as Finance Minister by Gottfried Haberler, and methodological critiques of his 'Business Cycles'. The segment lists publications in French, Spanish, Japanese, German, and English, reflecting the global reception of Schumpeter's work immediately following his death.
Read full textA continuation of the 1950 bibliographic entries (items 0264-0280) regarding Joseph Schumpeter. This section includes memorials, doctoral dissertations, and theoretical analyses of Schumpeter's work on the entrepreneur, long-duration economic cycles, social classes, and the problem of risk. Notable contributors include Erich Schneider, Arthur Smithies, and David McCord Wright, with several entries in French and Japanese reflecting the international scope of Schumpeterian scholarship immediately following his death.
Read full textBibliographic entries for the year 1951 (items 0281-0289). The segment covers reviews and introductions to Schumpeter's posthumous works, including 'Imperialism and Social Classes' and 'Ten Great Economists'. It features significant economic analyses such as William Baumol's 'Economic Dynamics', Edward Chamberlin's critique of the Schumpeterian system in light of monopoly theory, and Japanese reflections on Schumpeter's theory of interest.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of works published in 1951 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. It includes reviews of 'Imperialism and Social Classes' and 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', as well as significant commemorative essays from the 'Schumpeter, Social Scientist' collection edited by S.E. Harris. Key topics covered include Schumpeter's theory of interest, business cycle theory, economic methodology, and his relationship to Wicksellian theory. The list features international contributions from the USA, France, Italy, Spain, Norway, and Japan.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1951 regarding Joseph Schumpeter. The segment includes significant memorial essays and critical reviews of his major works such as 'Ten Great Economists', 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', and 'Imperialism and Social Classes'. Key contributors include Paul Samuelson on Schumpeter's teaching, Arthur Marget on monetary aspects, Edward Mason on monopoly, and various international perspectives from France, Japan, Italy, and the UK. Topics covered range from the dualism in Schumpeterian economics to comparisons with Marx and Keynes, and his theories on innovation and the capitalist process.
Read full textA list of bibliographic entries from 1951 focusing on Schumpeter's work. Topics include quantitative research in economics, the theory of economic development, sociological economics, political philosophy, and critiques of his theories on imperialism and social classes. Notable contributors include Jan Tinbergen, A.P. Usher, and David McCord Wright.
Read full textA collection of bibliographic entries from 1952 reviewing and analyzing Schumpeter's posthumous publications and core theories. Significant focus is placed on reviews of 'Ten Great Economists', his business cycle theory, capital formation, and the psychological aspects of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. It includes international perspectives from Japan, Brazil, France, and Germany.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of works from 1952 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include reviews of 'Imperialism and Social Classes' and 'Ten Great Economists', comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx regarding capital and business cycles, and analyses of his monetary and monopoly theories. Notable contributors include Shigeto Tsuru, R. Koebner, and K. Knorr.
Read full textA bibliography of publications from 1953 related to Schumpeter's legacy. It includes encyclopedia entries, doctoral dissertations on 'verstehende Nationaloekonomie', and reviews of his collected essays ('Aufsaetze zur oekonomischen Theorie'). The segment also lists Italian translations of his works on economic doctrines and discussions on the relationship between free enterprise and democracy.
Read full textA collection of bibliographic entries from 1953 regarding Joseph Schumpeter's work. It includes reviews of 'Aufsaetze zur oekonomischen Theorie', 'Imperialism and Social Classes', and 'Ten Great Economists'. Notable entries discuss the fate of capitalism compared to Marx, obstacles to economic development, and the relationship between the Austrian school and the Schumpeterian system.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1954 focusing heavily on the publication and reception of Schumpeter's posthumous 'History of Economic Analysis'. Includes Elizabeth Boody's introduction to the work, reviews by F.A. Hayek and J. Dorfman, and studies on Schumpeterian methodology and business leadership.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic listing of reviews and scholarly works concerning Joseph Schumpeter published between 1954 and 1955. The segment includes numerous international reviews of Schumpeter's posthumous 'History of Economic Analysis' and 'Economic Doctrine and Method' by prominent economists such as Jacob Viner, George Stigler, and H.G. Johnson. It also features comparative studies between Schumpeter and Marx regarding capitalist development and economic cycles, as well as doctoral dissertations and articles in English, Italian, Japanese, French, and German.
Read full textA collection of bibliographic entries from 1955 regarding Joseph Schumpeter's work. It includes reviews and analyses of 'History of Economic Analysis', 'Ten Great Economists', and 'Imperialism and Social Classes'. Key topics covered include general equilibrium, cycle theory, capitalist development, and entrepreneurship, with contributions from notable scholars like Knight, Kuznets, Robbins, and Hobsbawm.
Read full textThis segment contains a chronological bibliography of works from 1955 and 1956 related to Joseph Schumpeter. It includes numerous reviews and critical assessments of his posthumous 'History of Economic Analysis' and 'Economic Doctrine and Method'. Key topics covered in these entries include Schumpeter's theories on technical change, capital formation, the role of the entrepreneur, and comparisons between Schumpeterian and Keynesian models. The bibliography also lists sociological and methodological critiques, as well as discussions of his influence on the German historical school (Schmoller, Sombart) and development economics.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic works from 1956 and 1957 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The list includes reviews of his major works like 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' and 'History of Economic Analysis' in various languages (Italian, Japanese, German, English). Key themes covered in these entries include the Schumpeterian entrepreneur, the relationship between Schumpeter and other economists like Marx and Keynes, scholastic economics, and the application of his theories to democracy and industrial concentration.
Read full textThis segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works from 1957 and 1958 focused on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and sociological theories. Key topics include critiques of his 'History of Economic Analysis', his dynamic theory of monopoly, the concept of innovation, and his theories on imperialism and the decline of capitalism. The entries cover international scholarship from the USA, Japan, Italy, Germany, and France, featuring authors such as Ronald Meek, T. Yasui, and F.K. Mann.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1958 and 1959 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of international scholarship in Japanese, Polish, German, English, Spanish, French, Italian, and Russian. Key topics include analyses of Schumpeter's 'Theory of Economic Development', 'History of Economic Analysis', and 'Business Cycles', as well as discussions on the crisis of capitalism, the role of entrepreneurs versus managers, and comparisons with other thinkers like Keynes and Burnham.
Read full textA chronological bibliographic listing of academic works from 1959 and 1960 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including his theories on innovation and technological change compared with Usher, the future of capitalism, monopoly theory, and the relationship between economic theory and history. It includes international perspectives from the USA, Japan, Italy, Germany, and Poland, featuring reviews of 'History of Economic Analysis' and discussions on his sociological contributions and theories of socialism.
Read full textA collection of bibliographic entries from 1960 focusing on Schumpeter's theories. Topics include comparisons between Schumpeter and Keynes on entrepreneurial expectations, the application of development theory to non-market economies, business cycle analysis, and the relationship between Schumpeterian and Institutionalist theories. It also includes reviews of the Italian edition of 'History of Economic Analysis'.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1961 regarding Schumpeter's work. Key themes include the theory of innovation and autodeflation, comparative studies of imperialism (Schumpeter vs. Kautsky), Schumpeter's views on socialism and economic calculation, and his connection to the metallist tradition in monetary history. Includes references to the Brazilian edition of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works from 1961 and 1962 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his theories on economic development, money and distribution, the role of the entrepreneur compared to Max Weber's charisma, and critiques of his views on monopoly and imperialism. It includes international contributions in Japanese, Italian, German, French, Polish, and Russian, as well as specific references to the catalog of the Schumpeter Library at Hitotsubashi University.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic works concerning Joseph Schumpeter published between 1962 and 1964. The listings include international perspectives from Japan, the Soviet Union, Italy, Germany, and the USA, covering topics such as his theories of interest, credit, and capital; the 'self-destruction of capitalism'; comparisons with Karl Marx; and his analysis of business cycles and economic development.
Read full textThis segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works published in 1964 and 1965 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparative studies between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Max Weber and John Maynard Keynes, analyses of his theories on interest, profit, and business cycles, and explorations of his sociological perspectives. It also includes citations regarding market structure, innovation, and the history of economic analysis, with a significant number of Japanese and German language entries.
Read full textA list of academic publications from 1966 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's work. Topics include the Japanese translation of 'History of Economic Analysis', capital formation in developing countries, comparisons between Schumpeter and Max Weber, theories of innovation and business cycles, and comparisons of profit concepts between Keynes and Schumpeter.
Read full textA list of academic publications from 1967 regarding Schumpeterian theory. Key entries cover democratic elitism, innovation theory, the transfer of technology to developing countries, theories of imperialism, and innovation within the framework of monopolistic competition.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1967 and 1968 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx or Lenin, theories of the entrepreneur, monopolistic competition, the history of economic analysis, and the role of technological innovation in economic growth. It includes international contributions in German, Polish, Japanese, Italian, and French, alongside English-language publications from major academic presses.
Read full textA chronological bibliographic list of academic works concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter published between 1968 and 1970. The entries cover a wide range of international scholarship in English, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, German, and Dutch. Key topics include Schumpeter's theories on innovation, entrepreneurship, economic dynamics, and his seminal work 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. Notable contributors listed include W.F. Stolper, Paul Samuelson, and Paolo Sylos Labini, with several entries focusing on the scientific character of Schumpeterian theory and its relationship to Weberian and Marxist systems.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1970 and early 1971 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include the relationship between Schumpeterian and Marxian economics, the sociological aspects of entrepreneurship, the nature of money, and comparisons between Schumpeter and Max Weber. Notable contributors include Paul Samuelson, Erich Schneider, and F.K. Mann. The entries cover diverse international perspectives including German, Japanese, Italian, and American scholarship.
Read full textA comprehensive list of academic publications from 1971 (and one from 1972) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including his theory of business cycles, his relationship to thinkers like Marx, Weber, and Keynes, his views on entrepreneurship and economic development, and specific critiques of his monetary theory and zero interest rate paradox. The bibliography includes international contributions in Spanish, Italian, German, and Japanese.
Read full textStart of the 1972 bibliographic entries, beginning with a critique of Marxist theories of imperialism in relation to Schumpeterian thought.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1972 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his theories on economic development, imperialism, and social classes, as well as comparative studies with Karl Marx and J.M. Keynes. It includes international contributions in Italian, German, French, Japanese, and English, featuring authors such as T. Cozzi, D.P. Moynihan, and I. Nakayama.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of academic works from 1972 to 1974 focused on Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include his theories on social classes, imperialism, the role of the entrepreneur, and credit creation. The list features comparative studies between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Veblen, Weber, and Mosca, as well as analyses of his views on democracy, capitalism, and the 'long waves' of economic development. It includes international entries in English, German, Japanese, Italian, French, and Dutch.
Read full textA list of academic publications from 1974 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter. Topics include his business cycle models, critiques of his theory of transformation, firm size and innovation, sociology of imperialism, and comparative studies with Max Weber. It includes biographical entries from the Dictionary of American Biography and Webster's American Biographies.
Read full textA list of academic publications from 1975 regarding Schumpeter's work. Key entries cover reconsiderations of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', comparisons between Keynesian and Schumpeterian systems, surveys of market structure and innovation, and his methodology regarding economic reality.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic publications from 1975 and 1976 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Topics include the transition from domain to tax states, entrepreneurship, Kondratieff cycles, the relationship between Schumpeterian and Post-Keynesian systems, and his theories on imperialism and economic development. It includes entries in English, Japanese, German, French, and Italian, featuring works by authors such as Rostow, Bottomore, Samuelson, and Lachmann.
Read full textA chronological list of academic publications from late 1976 and 1977 regarding Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including the origins of innovation theory in Weber and Schumpeter, comparative studies with Veblen on imperialism, the crisis of the tax state, competitive democracy, and simulations of Schumpeterian competition. It includes international contributions in Polish, Serbo-Croatian, Italian, German, Japanese, and Portuguese.
Read full textHeader for the year 1978 in the chronological bibliography of Schumpeterian literature.
Read full textA comprehensive list of academic publications from 1978 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and sociological theories. Topics include his relationship with Italian economic thought during the Great Depression, comparisons with Keynes and Adam Smith, his conception of the entrepreneur, and analyses of his works on capitalism, socialism, and democracy. The bibliography covers international perspectives from Italy, Germany, Japan, the USA, and the Soviet Union.
Read full textInitial entries for the year 1979 in the Schumpeterian bibliography. Entries cover the rediscovery of the entrepreneur in economic policy discussions, Schumpeter's theories on economic growth and development, technical discussions on interest rates in steady-state models, and the contribution of business history to economic theory.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1979 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including the Schumpeterian hypothesis on market adjustment, modern Austrian capital theory, the Kondratieff cycle, and the role of the entrepreneur in economic development. It includes comparative studies between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Keynes, Schmoller, Elias, and Menger, as well as international perspectives from Japan, Italy, Germany, and the USA.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1979 and 1980 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's theories. Topics include comparative studies between Marx and Schumpeter on creative destruction and growth economics, the relationship between firm size and innovation (the Schumpeterian hypothesis), business cycle theory, and the sociology of imperialism. The segment includes international citations from the USA, Japan, Italy, Spain, and Hungary, covering dissertations, journal articles, and book introductions.
Read full textA collection of bibliographic entries from 1980 focusing on Schumpeter's theories of innovation, capitalism, and economic development. Notable topics include comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx regarding falling profit rates, the survival of capitalism (Scitovsky), and the relationship between entrepreneurship and bureaucratization.
Read full textA collection of bibliographic entries from 1981 examining Schumpeter's legacy. Key themes include the 'Schumpeterian Renaissance', the decline of capitalism, and his views on corporatism and monetarism. It features contributions to the 40th-anniversary assessment of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy' by authors like Bottomore and Fellner.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1981 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The segment includes entries on entrepreneurship, social change, and the 40th-anniversary retrospective of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy'. Key contributors listed include J.K. Galbraith, Gottfried Haberler, Robert Heilbroner, and Paul Samuelson. Topics span from Schumpeterian dynamics and innovation models to his forecasts on socialism and comparisons with thinkers like Hayek and Roepke. The entries cover international perspectives from the USA, Japan, Netherlands, Austria, and Scandinavia.
Read full textThis segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works from 1981 and 1982 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and social theories. Key topics include the crisis of capitalism, structural changes, the rationality postulate in economics, technological paradigms, and comparative economic systems. It features contributions from scholars such as Bronfenbrenner, Dahmen, and Dosi, covering diverse perspectives including Sovietological views and neo-Schumpeterian analyses of industrial development.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1982 (with some 1981-1982 entries) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include the economics of industrial innovation, the decay of capitalism, Schumpeterian dynamics, market structure, and the role of the entrepreneur. Notable entries include Nelson and Winter's 'An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change' and various contributions to the 'Schumpeterian Economics' collection edited by H. Frisch. The list covers international perspectives from the USA, UK, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Switzerland.
Read full textA comprehensive list of academic publications from 1982 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter. Topics include the relationship between business cycles and growth, Schumpeter's role as a historian of economic thought, comparisons with Gandhian economics, and his theories on innovation and socialism. Notable contributors include Paul Samuelson, Wolfgang Stolper, and Paul Sweezy.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1983, many of which commemorate the centenary of Schumpeter's birth. The collection includes comparisons between Marx and Schumpeter, analyses of Schumpeter's influence in Spain, and studies on his theories of interest, innovation, and competition. It also features works discussing his relationship with Boehm-Bawerk and the 'Schumpeterian revival' in industrial economics.
Read full textA chronological bibliography of works published in 1983 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his relationship to Marx and Keynes, the entrepreneurial function, his analysis of Ricardo, fiscal crisis, and economic methodology. It includes international contributions in English, Italian, French, Spanish, and German, featuring authors such as M. Blaug, R. Barre, A. Barrere, and R. Bellofiore.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works published in 1983 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include the Schumpeterian foundations of Anthony Downs's economic theory of democracy, comparisons between Schumpeter and Keynes regarding interest and economic systems, and Schumpeter's relationship with Karl Marx. The segment also covers biographical entries, his role as Finance Minister, and specific analyses of his theories on money, credit, cycles, and technical change. Works are listed in English, Italian, Japanese, and French.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works published in 1983 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of international scholarship, including comparisons between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; studies on innovation and long-term business cycles; and Schumpeter's influence on Spanish and Japanese economic thought. Key themes include the centenary of his birth, his theories on economic development, and his relationship with other major thinkers like Marshall, Weber, and Hayek.
Read full textA continuation of the comprehensive bibliography of works by and about Joseph Schumpeter, primarily from 1982 and 1983. This segment includes academic papers, journal articles, and books in English, Japanese, Italian, German, and Spanish. Key themes covered include Schumpeter's sociology of knowledge, his relationship to other economists like Marx, Keynes, Mitchell, and Walras, and specific topics such as imperialism, business cycles, entrepreneurship, and the future of capitalism. It also lists several Japanese contributions from the 'Schumpeter saihakken' (Schumpeter Rediscovered) collection and biographical works by Eduard Maerz.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic publications from 1983 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. The entries cover a wide range of topics including monetary theory, the relationship between credit and innovation, comparisons with Marx and Keynes, the structure of large-scale enterprises (contrasted with Galbraith), and the future of the capitalist system. The segment includes international contributions in Italian, Japanese, Spanish, German, and English, highlighting the global centenary interest in Schumpeter's work.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1983 (entries 1304 to 1328) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparisons between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; his relationship with the Austrian School and Friedrich von Wieser; theories of innovation and long waves; entrepreneurship; and his views on the decline of capitalist civilization. The list includes international contributions in English, Japanese, Italian, German, and Spanish.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works from 1983 focusing on Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The segment includes international contributions from the USA, Japan, Italy, Spain, and Germany, covering topics such as technological innovation, the comparison between Schumpeter and other major economists (Marx, Keynes, Hayek, and Hilferding), and his influence on economic development, democracy, and the theory of imperialism.
Read full textThis segment continues the 1983 bibliographic listings of works related to Joseph Schumpeter. It includes Japanese scholarship on Schumpeter's social science theory and historical approaches, comparisons between Weber and Schumpeter, and studies on the nonprofit sector, economic analysis in Central Europe, and the relevance of Schumpeterian political economy to monetary policy.
Read full textA comprehensive list of publications from 1984 focusing on Schumpeterian economics. Key themes include Schumpeter as a sociologist and historian of economic doctrine, the relationship between innovation and firm size, Japanese entrepreneurship, and comparative studies involving Marx, Keynes, and Hayek. It also lists significant centennial collections and bibliographic reviews of Schumpeter's critical acclaim.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works published in 1984 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparisons between Schumpeter and Marx, Weber, Keynes, and Marshall. Topics covered include the differentiation of entrepreneurs from small business owners, the Austrian theory of capital and interest, business cycle analysis, theories of imperialism, and the 'competitive' theory of democracy. The segment includes dissertations, journal articles, and conference papers from international sources (USA, Italy, Brazil, Netherlands, UK, Japan, Canada).
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works (entries 1399-1422) published primarily in 1984 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparative analyses between Schumpeter and other major economists like Keynes, Marx, and Hayek; the role of the entrepreneur and innovation in economic development; business cycle theory including 'long waves'; and Schumpeter's sociological perspectives on the 'crisis of the tax state' and the future of capitalism. The entries cover international scholarship in German, Italian, English, French, Hungarian, and Japanese.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1984 concerning Joseph Schumpeter's economic and social theories. Key topics include R&D and market structure (Levin and Reiss), the role of the entrepreneur (Loasby, Meyer, Nelson), business cycles (Low), and comparisons between Schumpeter and other major thinkers like Keynes and Marx (Meissner, Neumann, Neumark, Onorati). The segment also covers specific analyses of Schumpeter's monetary theory, his relationship with econometrics (Minotani), and his influence on Public Choice theory (Mitchell).
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1984 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter. Key themes include comparative studies of Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; technological innovation and long wave theory; the role of the entrepreneur; and the history of economic analysis. Notable contributors include F.M. Scherer, C. Seidl, and D. Patinkin, covering international perspectives from Italy, India, Germany, and the United States.
Read full textThis segment contains a bibliographic list of secondary works on Joseph Schumpeter published primarily in 1984. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparisons between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; the role of the entrepreneur in modern theory; Schumpeter's monetary and business cycle theories; and his influence on political science and economic policy. Notable authors listed include W.F. Stolper, P. Sylos Labini, G. Tichy, and Y. Shionoya, with works appearing in various languages including English, German, Japanese, and Italian.
Read full textA continuation of the 1984 bibliographic entries (items 1495-1502) regarding Schumpeter's influence. Topics include the structural instability of capitalism compared with Marx and Keynes, theories of imperialism, innovation in the chemical industry, and Schumpeterian competition within alternative technological regimes.
Read full textBibliographic entries for the year 1985 (items 1503-1516). The collection covers diverse Schumpeterian themes including fiscal sociology (linking Schumpeter to Ibn Khaldun), reexaminations of the theory of interest, the relationship between microeconomic rationality and macroeconomic circulation, and comparisons between Schumpeter and other thinkers like Wicksell and Schaeffle.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works published in 1985 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparative studies with Marx and Keynes, theories of interest and money, the role of the entrepreneur, public finance, and democratic elitism. Notable contributors include Mark Blaug, Peter Drucker, and various Italian scholars from the 'Società sviluppo impresa' collection edited by Filippini and Porta.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1985 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic and social theories. Key themes include comparative studies between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes; the Austrian intellectual tradition in exile; Schumpeterian methodology; theories of innovation and R&D; and his perspectives on imperialism and the transition to socialism. The segment includes international citations from the UK, Italy, USA, Japan, France, and Germany.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1985 (entries 1565 to 1588) focusing on Schumpeterian theory. Key topics include the relationship between Schumpeter and political parties, R&D and market structure, comparisons with Marx and Keynes, the role of the entrepreneur in post-industrial society, long wave theory, and Schumpeter's monetary and sociological perspectives. The segment includes several contributions from the Italian collection 'Società sviluppo impresa. Saggi su Schumpeter' and the French collection 'L’étérodoxie dans la pensée économique'.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1985 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover diverse topics including comparative studies with Marx and Keynes, the process of creative destruction, stochastic games, regional structural change, and Schumpeter's theories on imperialism and political phenomena. It includes dissertations, journal articles, and book chapters in English, French, Italian, German, and Japanese.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1986 focusing on Schumpeter's relationship with neoclassical economics, his impact on macroeconomics, and comparative analyses between Marshallian and Schumpeterian theories of economic evolution (gradualism vs. punctualism).
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1986 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's influence on economic and social theory. Key topics include the history of entrepreneurship, Kondratieff waves, the relationship between Schumpeterian analysis and Marxism/Keynesianism, and the emigration of Austrian economists. It features entries from notable scholars such as Mark Blaug, Martin Bronfenbrenner, and Richard Goodwin, covering diverse subjects from industrial targeting to the 'Leviathan' view of government.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works from 1986 focusing on Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories and their relationship to Marx and Keynes. Topics covered include venture capitalism, organizational entrepreneurship, innovation policy in open economies, technological unemployment, and the evolution of social science. The segment includes international perspectives from the USA, Great Britain, Japan, the Soviet Union, Italy, and Austria, featuring notable scholars such as Hyman Minsky, Israel Kirzner, and Ludwig Lachmann.
Read full textA bibliographic list of academic works published in 1986 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including the 'long wave' theory, comparative studies between Schumpeter, Marx, and Keynes, the influence of Marshall and Walras on Schumpeterian thought, and the role of the entrepreneur in modern economic theory. Specific works address technical change, market competition in recently industrialized economies, and the history of the Viennese School of economics. Notable contributors include Rosenberg, Rothschild, Schefold, and Shionoya.
Read full textA continuation of the 1986 bibliographic entries regarding Schumpeter. Topics include Walras' theory of the entrepreneur, studies on the Austrian school, the development of monetary theory in Austria (comparing Mises, Schumpeter, and Hilferding), and comparative analyses of Marx and Schumpeter from a Post-Keynesian perspective.
Read full textBibliographic entries from 1987 focusing on Schumpeterian themes. Key topics include the relationship between innovation and firm size, the concept of creative destruction, antitrust policy, evolutionary approaches to economic growth, and Schumpeter's methodology in his 'History of Economic Analysis'. It also covers his theories on credit, capital, interest, and the diffusion of information technology.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic listing of academic works published in 1987 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The segment covers diverse topics including property rights in monopoly theory, experimental markets, the history of economic thought, innovation patterns, and the obsolescence of the entrepreneur. It includes international contributions in English, German, French, Italian, and Japanese, featuring comparative studies with thinkers like Marx, Weber, and Keynes, as well as specific analyses of Schumpeter's 'Socialism, Capitalism and Democracy'.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1987 concerning Joseph Alois Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including his theories on credit and money, the role of the entrepreneur, comparisons with Marx and Keynes, technological innovation, and methodological individualism. It includes doctoral dissertations, journal articles, and edited volumes from various international perspectives including American, German, Italian, and Japanese scholarship.
Read full textA continuation of the comprehensive bibliography of works by and about Joseph Alois Schumpeter, covering the end of 1987 and a significant portion of 1988. The entries include books, journal articles, dissertations, and conference papers from various international sources (Italy, USA, Portugal, Netherlands, India, France, Great Britain, Denmark, China, and Germany). Key themes include evolutionary economics, the theory of democracy, technological innovation, firm size, and comparative analyses with other economists like Ricardo and Galbraith.
Read full textThis segment contains a bibliographic list of academic works from 1988 focused on Joseph Schumpeter's economic theories. Key themes include the relationship between Walras, Schumpeter, and Keynes; evolutionary economics; the role of government in industrial societies; innovation patterns in Japan; and the debate over Say's Law. It lists papers from the second world congress of the International Schumpeter Society and various international journals in Italian, English, French, Japanese, and Korean.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1988 concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The segment includes diverse international contributions (USA, Japan, Germany, Italy, France) covering topics such as the 'tax state', evolutionary approaches to inflation, the concept of creative destruction, and Schumpeter's relationship with other thinkers like Weber and Schmoller. Notable entries include works by Richard Musgrave on fiscal pressure, F.M. Scherer on microeconomics and managerial behavior, and Yoshiro Shionoya's methodological analyses.
Read full textA continuation of the 1988 bibliographic entries (items 1850-1859) focusing on evolutionary economics, Schumpeterian financing, and the 'Tax State'. Includes works by Stolper, Valentino, and Zimmermann, many of which were published in Hanusch's 'Evolutionary Economics' or presented at the International Schumpeter Society congress.
Read full textBibliographic entries for the year 1989 (items 1860-1876). This section features comparative studies between Schumpeter and Keynes, the unpublished introduction to Schumpeter's 'History of Economic Analysis', and explorations of the Austrian tradition. Key contributors include Allen, Boehm, Bottomore, and the editors of 'Schumpeter et Keynes, ou les dynamiques du capitalisme'.
Read full textA comprehensive bibliographic list of academic works published in 1989 (and some forthcoming) concerning Joseph Schumpeter. The entries cover a wide range of topics including comparisons between Schumpeter and Keynes, theories of long waves and technical change, the role of the entrepreneur, Schumpeter's influence on Italian economic thought, and his theories on imperialism and money. Key contributors listed include C. Freeman, R.M. Goodwin, A. Graziani, and T.W. Hutchison.
Read full textFinal entries of the chronological bibliography (items 1901-1916) covering works published or forthcoming in 1989-1990. Topics include Schumpeter's relationship to Keynes, Weber, and Schmoller, as well as economic sociology, instrumentalism, and the role of government.
Read full textA comprehensive alphabetical index of authors cited throughout the bibliography, ranging from A (Abe, G.) to Z (Zwiedineck-Suedenhorst). Each entry lists the corresponding entry numbers from the main bibliography.
Read full textA detailed subject index for the bibliography, categorizing Schumpeterian themes, concepts, and historical contexts. It includes cross-references to Schumpeter's specific works (e.g., CSD for Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy) and major economic topics like creative destruction, fiscal state, and the history of economic thought.
Read full text