1,549 works, 150 years of economic thought. Each one summarized and searchable, with cited passages inside.
Emil Lederer, Beiträge zur Kritik des Marxschen Systems (1906) Lederer’s 1906 essay is a compact internal critique of Marx rather than a general polemic...
Emil Lederer, Die wirtschaftlichen Organisationen (1913) Lederer’s study maps Germany’s economic associations as modern class organizations...
Emil Lederer: Einige Gedanken zur Soziologie der Revolutionen (1918) Lederer’s essay is a compressed sociology of revolution written at the edge of the German collapse of 1918 and then framed, in the November preface, by...
Emil Lederer’s 1920 Vorwort is a short prefatory essay to Dr. L. Galin’s study of Russian courts and penal practice. Its scope is methodological and conceptual: Lederer frames how a reader should receive a report from re...
Emil Lederer, Grundzüge der ökonomischen Theorie (1922) Lederer’s book is an introductory but conceptually ambitious account of economic theory in four chapters: method and object, elementary categories, labor-value theo...
Summary — Emil Lederer and Jakob Marschak, “Arbeiterschutz” (1927) This co-authored handbook chapter presents “Arbeiterschutz” as a legal-historical and institutional field within social policy...
Emil Lederer and Jakob Marschak, Die Klassen auf dem Arbeitsmarkt und ihre Organisationen (1927) Lederer and Marschak’s study recasts the labor market as a field of organized class formation rather than a neutral arena o...
Emil Lederer: „Die Umschichtung des Proletariats“ (1928) This file is a single conference-style address: Lederer speaks as sociologist and socialist theorist to an organized employees’ milieu, building on AfA-Bund materi...
Emil Lederer, Zur Morphologie der Krisen (1928) Lederer’s essay recasts crisis theory as a morphology of disproportions: not a search for one privileged cause, but an inquiry into which mismatches become cyclical forms...
Lederer / Lederer-Seidler, Japan – Europa (1929) Japan – Europa presents Japan not as an exotic object beside Europe, but as the privileged site where a world-historical rupture becomes visible...
Emil Lederer, Die Umwälzung in der Wirtschaft und die 40 Stunden-Woche (1931) Lederer’s 1931 ADGB lecture argues that the forty-hour week is not a narrow wage-policy demand but a response to a transformed capitalism...
Emil Lederer, Technischer Fortschritt und Arbeitslosigkeit (1931) Lederer’s 1931 study turns the Weimar debate over Rationalisierung into a theory of capitalist dynamics...