Nation Staat und Wirtschaft Beiträge zur Politik und Geschichte der Zeit
1919
by Mises
Ludwig von MisesImperialismInflationOtto von BismarckEugen von Bohm-BawerkGeorg Friedrich KnappHerbert SpencerMethodologySocial DemocracyStatismWorld War IIndividualismOtto BauerLiberalismDivision of LaborDemocracyGeopoliticsSelf-DeterminationAdolf WagnerCapital MovementsDavid RicardoDumpingFree TradeFriedrich ListProtectionismAutarkyCollectivismFriedrich EngelsJohann Karl RodbertusAdam SmithDavid HumeGeorg Wilhelm Friedrich HegelJeremy BenthamLeague of NationsProperty RightsSocialismFrench RevolutionMax WeberKarl MarxAustrian SchoolWar EconomyInterventionismPrice ControlsSpeculationAccountingCapital ConsumptionEconomic CalculationFiat MoneyQuantity Theory of MoneyDeficit SpendingPublic FinanceTaxationFactors of ProductionClass StruggleKathedersozialismusMarxismAlbert SchaffleBureaucracyCapital AccumulationKarl KautskyProductivityCommunismNationalizationRussian RevolutionSyndicalismTrade UnionsTreaty of VersaillesKnowledge Economics
Table of Contents · 29 segments
1
Title Pages and Publication Informationbibliography
2
Prefaceessay
3
Table of Contentschapter
4
Introductionessay
5
The Nation as a Language Communitytheoretical
6
Dialect and Cultural Languagetheoretical
7
National Transformations and Transition to the Nationality Principletheoretical
8
Liberal or Pacifist Nationalismtheoretical
9
Militant Nationalism and the National Question in Mixed-Population Areastheoretical
10
Migration, Relative Overpopulation, and German Imperialismtheoretical
11
The Roots of Imperialismtheoretical
12
Pacifism, Liberalism, and the Conditions of Lasting Peacetheoretical
13
History of German Democracy: Prussia and the Authoritarian Statechapter
14
Austria: The Habsburg State Idea and the Nationality Principlechapter
15
Austria: German Minorities, Democracy, and Conservative Retreatchapter
16
Austria after Königgrätz: Liberalism, the Dynasty, and Parliamentary Collapsechapter
17
Austrian Social Democracy, National Autonomy, and the Turn to Self-Determinationchapter
18
The Economic Position of the Central Powers in the Warchapter
19
War Socialism and the Siege Analogychapter
20
Autarky, Stockpiling, and the Limits of War Economychapter
21
Economic Costs of War, Inflation, and Capital Consumptiontheoretical
22
Financing State War Costs: Requisition, Taxation, Debt, and Capital Leviestheoretical
23
War Socialism and Genuine Socialismtheoretical
24
Socialism and Its Opponentstheoretical
25
Socialism and Utopiatheoretical
26
Centralized and Syndicalist Socialismtheoretical
27
Socialist Imperialismtheoretical
28
Concluding Considerationsessay
29
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