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Geoffrey M. Hodgson

CURRICULUM VITAE

www.geoffrey-hodgson.info October 2013

CONTENTS

1. Personal Page 1

2. Qualifications Page 1

3. Career History Page 2

4. Honours and Awards Page 2

5. Teaching Experience Page 4

6. Administrative and Examining Experience Page 5

7. Research Page 6

8. Research Grants Page 8

9. Refereeing and Consultancy Page 8

10. Publications Page 9

Books – Authored Alone or in Collaboration Page 9

Books – Edited Collections Page 10

Articles in Refereed Academic Journals Page 10 Notes and Comments in Academic Journals Page 17

Articles in Books Page 21

Articles in Reference Works Page 24

Article Translations and Reprints Page 28

Reviews Page 31

Other Items and Media Page 32

11. Conferences and Seminars Page 32

12. Memberships of Professional Bodies Page 43

1. PERSONAL

Born 28 July 1946, Watford, UK. Married. Two children. British citizenship.

Languages: moderate proficiency in French; some knowledge of German, Spanish & Italian.

2. QUALIFICATIONS

2002 Honorary Doctorate, Institute of Economics, Russian Academy of Sciences.

1997 Litt. D., University of Cambridge 1995 M.A., University of Cambridge

1974 M.A. (Economics), with distinction, University of Manchester

1971 Graduate Certificate in Education, with distinction, University of London (external) 1968 B.Sc. (Mathematics and Philosophy), University of Manchester

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3. CAREER HISTORY

1999-present Research Professor in Business Studies, University of Hertfordshire

1998 Reader in Institutional and Evolutionary Economics, University of Cambridge 1992-1998 University Lecturer in Economics, University of Cambridge

1990-1992 Professor of Economics, University of Northumbria (formerly Newcastle upon Tyne Polytechnic)

1987-1990 Reader in Economics, University of Northumbria (then Newcastle upon Tyne Polytechnic)

1984-1985 Hallsworth Research Fellow in Political Economy, University of Manchester 1981-1987 Principal Lecturer in Economics, University of Northumbria (then Newcastle

upon Tyne Polytechnic)

1980-1981 Visiting Professor of Economics, Bennington College, Vermont, USA 1974-1981 Lecturer and Senior Lecturer in Economics, Manchester Metropolitan

University (then Manchester Polytechnic)

1968-1972 Teacher of Mathematics, Levenshulme High School, Manchester, and Audenshaw Grammar School, Thameside

1964-1965 Computer Programmer, STL Research, Harlow, Essex

Also Visiting Positions at: Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden (1991); Centre for Interdisciplinary Research (Zif), University of Bielefeld, Germany (1992); Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna (1994); Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Kansai University, Japan (1997); University of Aix-en-Provence III, France (2002); University of Lyon II, France (2002); University of Reims Champagne- Ardenne, France (2004, 2005, 2006, 2008); Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, China (2004); University of Strasbourg, France (2005); Nanjing University of Finance and Economics, China (2006), University of Athens, Greece (2007); Max Planck Institute for Economics, Jena, Germany (2010), Shandong University, China (2010-13), George Mason University, USA (2013), Erasmus University Rotterdam (2010-13).

4. HONOURS AND AWARDS

Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences.

Recipient of the 2012 Veblen-Commons Award.

Fagg Foster Distinguished Speaker, University of Denver, USA, 2008.

President, Association for Evolutionary Economics, 2006.

Honorary Life Member, European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy from 2005.

Thomas P. Johnson, Distinguished Fellow, Rollins College, Florida, USA, 2005.

Global Visiting Scholar, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, USA, 2001.

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Ranked in the top 6% of 35461 economists on RePEc database in February 2013.

http://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html

Ranked in a 2006 poll of 1249 subscribers to the Post-Autistic Economics Review as 82nd in a list of the most important economists of the twentieth century, in terms of who added most to our understanding of economic phenomena.

Listed in Who’s Who in Economics (4th edn., Edward Elgar, 2003) as one of the foremost 1,168 living economists in the world – and one of the foremost 64 living economists residing in the UK – based on citation analysis of journal articles published in 1990-2000.

Listed in Who’s Who in Economics (3rd edn., Edward Elgar, 1999) as one of the foremost 1,082 living economists in the world – and one of the foremost 167 living economists residing in the UK – based on number of citations in the Social Science Citations Index in 1984-1996.

Listed as one of ‘The Top 40 Living Economists on the Net’ by the Post-Autistic Economics Network, November 2000 (www.paecon.net). (Method: number of pages returned on Google for name plus “economics”).

I appear in Tom Coupé’s overall ranking of the top 1000 living economists in the world. (These rankings were derived from data on the EconLit database of about 650 recognised journals and apply to the years 1994-98. Coupé’s data show that I am 62nd in the world and 2nd in the UK in terms of citation impact; 23rd in the world and 2nd in the UK in terms of number of journal articles published; and 18th in the world and 1st in the UK in terms of number of journal pages published. Coupé is at the Université Libre de Bruxelles and his research was funded by the European Economic Association.)

Ranked by a panel of 80 Japanese academic economists, on the basis of published books, as one of the 23 currently most important economists of all time, and one of the top 17 living economists in the world. The ranking was organised by the Japanese business journal The Diamond Weekly (circulation approximately 100,000) and the results were published in its issue of 20 December 1997.

Paper with Shuxia Jiang ‘La Economía de la Corrupctión y la Corrupctión de la Economía:

Un Perspectiva Institucionalista’ (Spanish translation of ‘The Economics of Corruption and the Corruption of Economics: An Institutionalist Perspective’, Journal of Economic Issues, 41(4), December 2007) in Revista de Economía Institucional, 10(18), 2008, pp. 55-80, was on the Social Science Research Network's top ten download list for Institutional and Transition Economics in 2008.

Paper with Thorbjørn Knudsen ‘Why We Need a Generalized Darwinism: And Why a Generalized Darwinism is Not Enough’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 61(1), September 2006 achieved Essential Science Indicators, Hot Paper Status in January 2008. It became one of the official “Top 20 most-cited articles” published in the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 2005 – 2009.

‘Citation of Excellence, Highest Quality Rating’ by Anbar Electronic Intelligence, for article (written with Harry Rothman) on ‘The Editors and Authors of Economics Journals: A Case of Institutional Oligopoly?’, Economic Journal, 109(2), February 1999.

‘Citation of Excellence, Highest Quality Rating’ by Anbar Electronic Intelligence, for article on ‘Evolutionary and Competence-Based Theories of the Firm’, in Journal of Economic Studies, March 1998.

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‘The Approach of Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Literature, March 1998, cited as ‘Article of the Month’, in the French language journal Alternatives Economiques, November 1998.

Clarence E. Ayres Visiting Scholar for 1990, Association for Evolutionary Economics Meeting, Washington DC, USA.

University of Manchester 1974 Dehn Prize in Commerce and Industry for M.A. thesis on The Effects of Joint Production and Fixed Capital in Linear Economic Analysis.

5. TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Areas of Teaching Competence and Experience

Currently first supervisor for two PhD students at the University of Hertfordshire. I have been first supervisor for eight successful PhD students at the University of Cambridge, one successful student at the University of Lyon II, and ten successful PhD students at the University of Hertfordshire.

At the University of Cambridge I taught courses on the MBA (scenario planning) and on the MPhil in Management Studies (methodology, business economics and evolutionary economics). Undergraduate courses taught at Cambridge included microeconomics, industrial economics and economic policy issues.

I have extensive teaching experience at both postgraduate and undergraduate levels, in microeconomic and macroeconomic theory, microeconomic and macroeconomic policy, scenario planning, industrial economics, labour economics, the history of economic thought, etc..

I was scientist in charge of, and lecturer at, the 1996, 1997 and 1998 Summer Schools for post-masters researchers, organised by the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy in Spain, Greece and Ireland respectively.

In 2004 I was appointed a graduate tutor at the ESEADE Business School, Buenos Aires.

Teaching Evaluation

My lecturing ability was evaluated and compared with that of several leading international social scientists in the 1996, 1997 and 1998 postgraduate, EC-funded summer schools of the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy. I delivered four of the ten most highly ranked lectures in the three years.

[Other lecturers in the top ten included Philip Mirowski (University of Notre Dame), Mark Granovetter (Stanford University), Ash Amin (University of Durham), Ronald Dore (London School of Economics) and Giovanni Dosi (University of Rome).]

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6. ADMINISTRATIVE AND EXAMINING EXPERIENCE

External Administrative and Examining Roles

Formerly president of the International Confederation of Associations for the Reform of Economics. Formerly Member of the Council (1988-99) and General Secretary (1988-97) of the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy.

Former member of the Oxford and Cambridge Examinations and Assessment Council, Economics and Business Committee.

Acted as a PhD external examiner at the UK universities of Bath, Cambridge, East Anglia, Edinburgh, Lincoln, London (LSE), London (QMW), London (UCL), Stirling, Strathclyde, and York. Acted as a PhD external examiner at the overseas universities of Sydney (Australia); ULB (Belgium); Odense (Denmark); Aix-Marseille, Lille, Lyon II, Rheims (France); European University Institute (Italy); Erasmus, Nijmegan (Netherlands); and Lincoln (New Zealand).

Acted as an undergraduate external examiner at the universities of Staffordshire and East London. Acted as a postgraduate external examiner at the University of the West Indies (Graduate Studies in Economics).

Currently undergraduate external examiner at University College Cork.

Acted as external examiner for a Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches (HDR) at the University of Montpellier I (2008) and at the University of Nanterre (2009).

External Assessor for Professorial Appointments Committees, University of Newcastle (1999); University of East Anglia (2000).

External Advisor for the Masters Programmes at the University of Bremen, Germany (1999).

Member of the International Advisory Board for the MA in Technology Governance, University of Tallin, Estonia.

Treasurer and Trustee of the Foundation for European Economic Development (Registered Charity).

Member of the New Era Economics Panel of the Institute for Public Policy Research (from 2011)

Member of the AERES Evaluation Panel, Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne, Paris 2013.

Journal and Book Series Editorships

Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Institutional Economics.

Consultant Editor, Journal of Research in Institutional Economics.

Member of the Editorial Board of Epistemic Engineering, the Journal of Economic Methodology, the Journal of Evolutionary Economics, the Journal of Institutional Innovation, Development and Transition, Review of Social Economy, World Economics Journal and Econômica (Brazil).

Associate Editor of the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization and Economic and Industrial Democracy. Member of the Scientific Committee of the Journal of Entrepreneurial

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and Organizational Diversity. Member of Advisory Editorial Board of the International Review of Applied Economics, and the Journal of Economic Analysis.

Member of the International Editorial Board of the Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review, the Russian Journal of Economic Theory, and Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy.

Member of the International Advisory Board of the International Political Economy Yearbook.

Member of the Editorial Committee of the Revista De Economia Institutional. Member of the Editorial Board for the International Network for Economic Method. A former Editor of the Cambridge Journal of Economics.

Book series editor, ‘New Horizons in Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’, Edward Elgar Publishing.

Book series editor, ‘Critical Studies in Economic Institutions’, Edward Elgar Publishing.

At the University of Cambridge, 1992-1998

Was Director of the MPhil in Management Studies and Secretary of the Management Studies Syndicate. Authored successful 1998 application for reinstatement of status of ‘ESRC Recognised Course’ for the receipt of ESRC Advanced Course Studentships and for Research Training classification

Was a member of the Research Strategy Committee of the Management Studies Group and Chair of the Judge Institute Computer Users’ Group.

Occasional internal PhD examiner, Judge Institute of Management Studies and Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge. Examiner of the Management Economics and Accounting paper, Manufacturing Engineering Tripos.

7. RESEARCH

Current Research

My current research focuses on the theoretical and methodological foundations of institutional and evolutionary economics. How are institutions built up and sustained? What are their economic and other effects? How do they evolve? This research agenda has immediate applications for the understanding of learning, routines, technological change, and economic development.

One focus is on the theory and nature of the firm, and its place in a broader theory of institutions and institutional change.

Another focus is on the evolution of institutions, the application of Darwinian principles to socio-economic evolution, the conditions underlying increasing socio-economic complexity, and the impact of increasing complexity in capitalist development.

With several of my PhD students I am exploring ways in which insights from institutional and evolutionary economics can help our understanding of economic performance. These empirical research projects include the investigation of routinisation and niche-construction in

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firms, the degree to which firms adapt to change, and the role of institutional complementarities in firm development.

Centre for Research in Institutional Economics

With colleagues at the University of Hertfordshire I founded the Centre for Research in Institutional Economics in 1999. I directed CRIE until 2009, when it was replaced by the Group for Research into Organisational Evolution (GROE). The following evaluations are taken from a 2003 report on CRIE:

“The Centre for Research in Institutional Economics represents one of few places in the world where serious scholarship is undertaken on institutional economics.” (Prof Daniel Bromley, USA)

“It is no exaggeration to say that some of the work that is emerging from CRIE defines cutting- edge research.” (Prof Nicolai Foss, Denmark)

“If I was asked to name three institutions with a recognised reputation in institutional economics I would name Stanford University, Copenhagen Business School and the University of Hertfordshire.” (Prof Neil Kay, UK)

“In the area of economics, and institutional economics on particular, CRIE has put the University of Hertfordshire on the world map.” (Prof Uskali Mäki, The Netherlands)

CRIE “is one of the top three centers of research into institutionalist theory, evolutionary economics and applied work in Europe.” (Prof Philip Mirowski, USA)

“The Centre for Research in Institutional Economics at the University of Hertfordshire is one of the leading institutions for the research on economic institutions and has had a remarkable impact on the international academic community.” (Prof Ugo Pagano, Italy)

“In spite of its relatively small size, there is no doubt that the Centre for Research in Institutional Economics at the University of Hertfordshire has a considerable impact on ongoing international discussions in institutional economics.” (Prof Jack Vromen, The Netherlands)

“The Centre for Research in Institutional Economics (CRIE) at the University of Hertfordshire has become the leading centre in Europe for research into institutional economics.” (Prof Ulrich Witt, Germany)

Past Research

Research in the 1970s included applications of Sraffa-type input-output analysis to value theory, macroeconomic policy and monetary theory. These issues are all reflected in publications in the 1974-80 period.

In the 1980s additional research interests were developed in the theory of the firm, the economics of worker participation, the economics of planning, the theory of economic systems, expectations and information in economic theory, the economic consequences of democracy, the economics of institutions, and the long-term causes of economic growth.

Again, all these concerns are reflected in publications.

Research in the 1990s moved on to issues surrounding the nature of economic evolution and economic institutions, again leading to a number of major publications. This work prepared the ground for my current research (see above).

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8. RESEARCH GRANTS

Obtained £9,500 research grant from the Economic and Social Research Council for the organisation of the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on

‘European Economic Integration’ in Keswick, UK, in September 1989. Helped to obtain about

£19,000 in various grants for the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy conference on ‘Rethinking Economics’ in Florence, Italy, in November 1990.

Obtained European Community Erasmus Programme grants of 9,000 ecu and 5,000 ecu for the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy in December 1990 and August 1992, respectively.

Obtained 33,000 euro grant from the European Commission under the Community Action for Cooperation in Science and Technology with Central and Eastern European Countries programme in August 1993.

Obtained 10,000 euro grant under the FAST programme of the European Commission in October 1993.

Obtained 80,000 euro grant under the ACE programme of the European Commission in March 1996.

Obtained 300,000 euro grant under the TMR (Summer Schools) programme of the European Commission in June 1996.

With colleagues in CRIE I have obtained a number of small research grants since 2000.

Obtained £8,000 sponsorship deal from T-Mobile for 2005 Malthus Lecture.

9. REFEREEING AND CONSULTANCY

Acted as referee for academic journals including: Accounting, Organizations and Society; the American Economic Review; American Sociological Review; Business and Politics; the Cambridge Journal of Economics; the Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society;

Capital and Class; Competition and Change; Constitutional Political Economy; the Eastern Economic Journal; Ecological Economics, Ecology and Society; Economica; The Economic Journal; Economics and Philosophy; Economic History Review; Education Economics;

European Journal of the History of Economic Thought; European Journal of Law and Economics; the European Journal of Political Economy; Economic and Industrial Democracy; Feminist Economics; Finnish Economic Papers; Industrial and Corporate Change; Industry and Innovation; History of Economic Ideas; History of Economics Review;

the International Journal of the Economics of Business; the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research; the International Review of Applied Economics; the International Studies Quarterly; the Journal of Critical Realism; the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization; the Journal of Economic Issues; the Journal of Economic Literature; the Journal of Economic Methodology; the Journal of Economic Psychology; the Journal of Economic Studies; the Journal of Economic Surveys; the Journal of Evolutionary Economics;

the Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, the Journal of the History of Biology, the Journal of the History of Economic Thought; the Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics; Law and Contemporary Problems, the Journal of Management and Governance;

the Journal of Management Inquiry; the Journal of Management Studies; the Journal of Rural Studies; Labor History; the Journal of Theoretical Politics; The Manchester School; New

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Political Economy; Oeconomia; Political Studies Review; Recherches Economiques de Louvain; Regional Studies; Research Policy; Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology; the Review of Austrian Economics; the Review of Behavioral Economics;

the Review of Economic Anthropology Issues; the Review of Economic Issues; the Review of Political Economy; Organization Studies; the Review of Social Economy; Revue de Philosophie Économique; Social Science and Medicine; Technology Analysis and Strategic Management; Theory, Culture and Society; Theory and Society; Trends in Ecology and Evolution and Work, Employment and Society.

Regularly asked to referee book typescripts for publishers including Academic Press, Basil Blackwell, Cambridge University Press, Chicago University Press, Edward Elgar, Kluwer, Unwin Hyman, Macmillan, Polity, Princeton University Press, Routledge, and M. E. Sharpe.

Advisor to Neil Kinnock and Roy Hattersley in the 1980s.

Consultancy advice has been given to Lifespan NHS Trust, Cambridge (1994) and to the Union of Communication Workers (1986-1990) on the development of computer database information systems.

Member of the Royal Economic Society, Conference Programme Committee, 1991-94.

Under consultancy contract 1999-2000 with the OECD International Futures Programme.

Acted as an assessor in HEFCE Research Assessment Exercise.

Member of the 2004 University of Siena Audit Team for the Departments of Economics, Economics and Law, and Quantitative Methods.

Acted as an assessor for several research grant applications for the Economic and Social Research Council (UK) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

Consultant Editor of the International Encyclopedia of Economic Sociology (Routledge, 2006), edited by Jens Beckert and Milan Zafirovski.

From 2009, member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Köln, Germany.

10. PUBLICATIONS

Books Authored

16. Conceptualizing Capitalism: Institutions, Evolution, Future, University of Chicago Press, forthcoming.

15. From Pleasure Machines to Moral Communities: Toward an Evolutionary Economics without Homo Economicus, University of Chicago Press, 2013, ISBN 9780226922713. . 14. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) Darwin’s Conjecture: The Search for General Principles of

Social and Economic Evolution, University of Chicago Press, 2010, ISBN 9780226346908. 13. Economía institucional y evolutiva contemporánea (in Spanish), with an introduction by

Bruno Gandlegruber and Arturo Lara Rivero, Universida Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico City, 2007.

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12. Economics in the Shadows of Darwin and Marx: Essays on Institutional and Evolutionary Themes, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2006. ISBN-13: 978 1 84542 497 8 (hbk). ISBN-10: 1 84542 497 2 (hbk).

11. The Evolution of Institutional Economics: Agency, Structure and Darwinism in American Institutionalism, Routledge, London, 2004. ISBN 0-415-32252-9 (hbk) 0-415-32253-7 (pbk). (Also in Chinese edition.)

10. How Economics Forgot History: The Problem of Historical Specificity in Social Science, Routledge, London, 2001. ISBN 0-415-25716-6 (hbk) ISBN 0-415-25717-4 (pbk) (Also in Chinese edition.)

9. Evolution and Institutions: On Evolutionary Economics and the Evolution of Economics, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 1999. ISBN 1-85898-813-6 (hbk) ISBN 1-85898-824-1 (pbk) (Also in Chinese edition.)

8. Economics and Utopia: Why the Learning Economy is Not the End of History, Routledge, London, 1999. ISBN 0-415-19685-X (pbk) (Also in Japanese edition.)

7. Economics and Evolution: Bringing Life Back into Economics, Polity Press, Cambridge and University of Michigan Press, 1993. (Also in Spanish, Portuguese and Japanese editions.)

6. After Marx and Sraffa: Essays in Political Economy, Macmillan Press, London, 1991.

5. Economics and Institutions: A Manifesto for a Modern Institutional Economics, Polity Press, Cambridge, and University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1988. (Also in Chinese, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese and Russian editions.)

4. The Democratic Economy: A New Look at Planning, Markets and Power, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1984. (Partly translated into Turkish.)

3. Capitalism, Value and Exploitation, Martin Robertson, Oxford, 1982. (Also in Chinese edition.)

2. Labour at the Crossroads, Martin Robertson, Oxford, 1981.

1. Socialism and Parliamentary Democracy, Spokesman, Nottingham, 1977. (Also in Italian, Spanish, Turkish and Japanese editions.)

Books - Edited Collections

12. Mathematics and Modern Economics, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2012. ISBN 978 1 78100 043 4.

11. (Edited with Charles Camic) Essential Writings of Thorstein Veblen, Routledge, London, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-77790-2 (hbk).

10. Darwinism and Economics, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2009. ISBN 978 1 84844 072 2 (hbk).

9. The Evolution of Economic Institutions: A Critical Reader, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2007. ISBN 978 1 84720 083 9 (hbk), 978 1 84720 087 7 (pbk).

8. Recent Developments in Institutional Economics, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2003. ISBN 1-84064-885-6 (hbk).

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7. A Modern Reader in Institutional and Evolutionary Economics: Key Concepts, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2002. ISBN 1-84064-474-5 (hbk) 1-84064-495-8 (pbk). (Also in Chinese edition.)

6. Capitalism in Evolution: Global Contentions – East and West (edited with M. Itoh and N.

Yokokawa) Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2001. ISBN 1-85898-860-8 (hbk).

5. The Foundations of Evolutionary Economics: 1890-1973, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 1998.

4. Economics and Biology, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1995.

3. The Elgar Companion to Institutional and Evolutionary Economics (edited with W. J.

Samuels and M. R. Tool) Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1994.

2. The Economics of Institutions, International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1993.

1. Rethinking Economics (edited with E. Screpanti), Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1991.

Articles in Refereed Academic Journals

134. ‘Come Back Marshall, All is Forgiven? Complexity, Evolution, Mathematics and Marshallian Exceptionalism’, European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, forthcoming.

133. ‘Observations on the Legal Theory of Finance’, Journal of Comparative Economics, published online 2013.

132. ‘The Evolution of Morality and the End of Economic Man’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, published online 2013.

131. (With Kainan Huang) ‘Brakes on Chinese Development: Institutional Causes of a Growth Slowdown’, Journal of Economic Issues, 47(3), September 2013, pp. 599-622.

130. ‘On the Complexity of Economic Reality and the History of the use of Mathematics in Economics’, Filosofía de la Economía, 1(1), Invierno 2013, pp. 125-148.

129. ‘Understanding Organizational Evolution: Toward a Research Agenda using Generalized Darwinism’, Organization Studies, 34(7), July 2013, pp. 973-992, doi:10.1177/0170840613485855

128. ‘The Mirage of Microfoundations’, Journal of Management Studies. Published online 2012. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6486.2012.01079.x.

127. ‘On the Limits of Rational Choice Theory’, Economic Thought, 1(1), 2012. Published online.

126. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Generalized Darwinism and Evolutionary Economics: From Ontology to Theory’, Biological Theory, 6(4), 2012, pp. 326-337. DOI 10.1007/s13752- 012-0043-5.

125. ‘Toward an Evolutionary and Moral Science: Remarks on Receiving the Veblen- Commons Award’, Journal of Economic Issues, 44(2), June 2012, pp. 265-75.

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124. (With Kainan Huang) ‘Evolutionary Economics and Evolutionary Game Theory: Are They Different Species?’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 22, 2012, pp. 345-66. DOI 10.1007/s00191-010-0203-3.

123. ‘Sickonomics: Diagnoses and Remedies’, Review of Social Economy, September 2011, 69(3), pp. 357-76. doi: 10.1080/00346764.2010.502839.

122. 'Reforming Economics after the Financial Crisis’, Global Policy, 2(2), May, pp. 190-5.

121. ‘The Eclipse of the Uncertainty Concept in Mainstream Economics’, Journal of Economic Issues, 45(1), March 2011, pp. 159-79. ISSN 0143-2095.

120. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Generative Replication and the Evolution of Complexity’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 75(1), July 2010, pp. 12-24.

doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2010.03.008.

119. ‘Learning From Early Attempts to Generalize Darwinian Principles to Social Evolution’, Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, 8(2), June 2010, pp. 153-67.

DOI:10.1556/JEP.8.2010.2.5.

118, ‘Darwinian Coevolution of Organizations and the Environment’, Ecological Economics, 69(4), February 2010, pp. 700-6. DOI:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2008.06.016..

117. ‘Choice, Habit and Evolution’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 20(1), January 2010, pp. 1-18. DOI 10.1007/s00191-009-0134-z. ISSN 0936-9937 (Print) 1432-1386 (Online).

116. ‘The Great Crash of 2008 and the Reform of Economics’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 33(6), November 2009, pp. 1205-21. ISSN 0309-166X.

115. ‘Institutional Economics into the Twenty-First Century’, Studi e Note di Economia, 24(1), 2009, pp. 3-26.

114. ‘Agency, Institutions, and Darwinism in Evolutionary Economic Geography’, Economic Geography, 85(2), April 2009, pp. 167-73.

113. ‘On the Institutional Foundations of Law: The Insufficiency of Custom and Private Ordering’, Journal of Economic Issues, 43(1), March 2009, pp. 143-66.

112. ‘Towards an Alternative Economics of Health Care’, Health Economics, Policy and Law, 4(1), January 2009, pp. 99-114.

111. (With Howard E. Aldrich, David L. Hull, Thorbjørn Knudsen, Joel Mokyr and Viktor J.

Vanberg) ‘In Defence of Generalized Darwinism’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 18(5), October 2008, pp. 577-96.

110. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘The Emergence of Property Rights Enforcement in Early Trade: A Behavioral Model Without Reputational Effects’ Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 68(1), 2008, pp. 48-62.

109. ‘How Veblen Generalized Darwinism’, Journal of Economic Issues, 42(2), June 2008, pp. 399-405.

108. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘In Search of General Evolutionary Principles: Why

Darwinism is Too Important to be Left to the Biologists’ Journal of Bioeconomics,10(1), April 2008, pp. 51-69.

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107. ‘An Institutional and Evolutionary Perspective on Health Economics’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 32(2), March 2008, pp. 235-56. DOI: 10.1093/cje/bem0333. ISSN 0309-166X.

106. ‘Prospects for Economic Sociology’ (review article), Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 38(1), March 2008, pp. 133-49.

105. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Information, Complexity and Generative Replication’, Biology and Philosophy, 43(1), 2008, pp. 47-65. DOI: 10.1007/s10539-007-9073-y.

104. (With Shuxia Jiang) ‘The Economics of Corruption and the Corruption of Economics:

An Institutionalist Perspective’, Journal of Economic Issues, 41(4), December 2007, pp.

1043-61. ISSN 0143-2095.

103. ‘Evolutionary and Institutional Economics as the New Mainstream?’, Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review, 4(1), September 2007, pp. 7-25.

102. ‘Taxonomizing the Relationship Between Biology and Economics: A Very Long Engagement’, Journal of Bioeconomics, 9(2), August 2007, pp. 169-175. DOI 10.1007/s10818-007-9022-5.

101. ‘Meanings of Methodological Individualism’, Journal of Economic Methodology, 14(2), June 2007, pp. 211-26.

100. ‘The Revival of Veblenian Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Issues, 41(2), June 2007, pp. 325-40. ISSN 0143-2095.

99. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Firm-Specific Learning and the Nature of the Firm: Why Transaction Costs May Provide an Incomplete Explanation’, Revue Économique, 58(2), mars 2007, pp. 331-50. ISSN 0035-2764.

98. ‘Institutions and Individuals: Interaction and Evolution’, Organization Studies, 28(1), January 2007, pp. 95-116. ISSN: 1741-3044 (online). ISSN: 0170-8406 (print).

97. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘The Nature and Units of Social Selection’, Journal of

Evolutionary Economics, 16(5), December 2006, pp. 477-89. ISSN 0936-9937 (print) ISSN 1432-1386 (online).

96. ‘Institutions, Recessions and Recovery in the Transitional Economies’, Journal of Economic Issues, 40(4), December 2006, pp. 875-94. ISSN 0143-2095.

95. ‘Instinct and Habit before Reason: Comparing the Views of John Dewey, Friedrich Hayek and Thorstein Veblen’, Advances in Austrian Economics, 9, 2006, pp. 109-43. ISSN 1529- 2134. ISBN-13 978-0-7623-1378-5. ISBN-10 0-7623-1378-1.

94. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Dismantling Lamarckism: Why Descriptions of Socio- Economic Evolution as Lamarckian are Misleading’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 16(4), October 2006, pp. 343-66. ISSN 0936-9937 (print) ISSN 1432-1386 (online).

93. ‘Schmoller’s Impact on the Anglophone Literature in Economics’, Schmollers Jahrbuch:

Journal of Applied Social Science Studies, 126(2), 2006, pp. 163-76. ISSN: 1439-121X.

92. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Why We Need a Generalized Darwinism: And Why a

Generalized Darwinism is Not Enough’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 61(1), September 2006, pp. 1-19. ISSN 0167-2681.

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91. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Balancing Inertia, Innovation, and Imitation in Complex Environments’, Journal of Economic Issues, 40(2), June 2006, pp. 287-95. ISSN 0143- 2095.

90. (With Richard Carter) ‘The Impact of Empirical Tests of Transaction Cost Economics on the Debate on the Nature of the Firm’, Strategic Management Journal, 27(5), May 2006, pp. 461-76. ISSN 0143-2095.

89. ‘What Are Institutions?’ Journal of Economic Issues, 40(1), March 2006, pp. 1-25. ISSN 0021-3624.

88. ‘O Probleme formalisma v economicheskoi teorii (On the Problem of Formalism in Economics)’ (in Russian), Voprosy Economiki, 2006, no. 3, pp. 112-124.

87. ‘Generalizing Darwinism to Social Evolution: Some Early Attempts’, Journal of Economic Issues, 39(4), December 2005, pp. 899-914. ISSN 0021-3624.

86. ‘Knowledge at Work: Some Neoliberal Anachronisms’, Review of Social Economy, 60(4), December 2005, pp. 547-65. ISSN 0034-6764.

85. ‘Alfred Marshall versus the Historical School?’ Journal of Economic Studies, 32(4), 2005, pp. 331-48. ISSN 0144-3585.

84. ‘The Limits to Participatory Planning: A Reply to Adaman and Devine’, Economy and Society, 34(1), February 2005, pp. 141-53. ISSN 0308-5147.

83. ‘Austrian Economics, Evolutionary Psychology and Individual Actions’, in Koppl, Roger (ed.) (2004) Evolutionary Psychology and Economic Theory: Advances in Austrian Economics, Volume 7 (Amsterdam: Elsevier), pp. 61-78. ISSN 1529-2134.

82. ‘Social Darwinism in Anglophone Academic Journals: A Contribution to the History of the Term’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 17(4), December 2004, pp. 428-63.

ISSN: 0952-1909 (print) ISSN: 1467-6443 (online).

81. ‘Veblen and Darwinism’, International Review of Sociology, 14(3), November 2004, pp.

339-57. ISSN 0390-6701.

80. ‘Reclaiming Habit for Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Psychology, 25(4), October 2004, pp. 651-60. ISSN: 0167-4870.

79. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘The Firm as an Interactor: Firms as Vehicles for Habits and Routines’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 14(3), July 2004, pp. 281-307. ISSN 0936- 9937 (print) ISSN 1432-1386 (online).

78. ‘Darwinism, Causality and the Social Sciences’, Journal of Economic Methodology , 11(2), June 2004, pp. 175-94. ISSN 1350-178X.

77. ‘¿Los experimentos pueden falsear la teoría de la utilidad esperada?’, Revista De Economía Institucional, 6, no. 10, primer semestre 2004, pp. 15-45. ISSN 0124-5996.

76. ‘Veblen in Chicago: The Winds of Creativity’, Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, 22-A, 2004, pp. 145-60. ISBN 07623-1089-8. ISSN 0743- 4154.

75. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘The Complex Evolution of a Simple Traffic Convention: The Functions and Implications of Habit’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 54(1), 2004, pp. 19-47. ISSN 0167-2681.

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74. ‘Opportunism is Not the Only Reason Why Firms Exist: Why an Explanatory Emphasis on Opportunism May Mislead Management Strategy’, Industrial and Corporate Change, 13(2), April 2004, pp. 403-20. ISSN 0960-6491.

73. ‘Some Claims Made for Critical Realism in Economics: Two Case Studies’, Journal of Economic Methodology, 11(1), March 2004, pp. 71-91. ISSN 1350-178X.

72. ‘How Veblenian Evolutionary Thinking Transcends Methodological Individualism and Methodological Collectivism’, Economie et institutions, 2003, No. 3, pp. 5-28.

71. ‘Schumpeter’s “Entrepreneur” in Historical Context’, in Koppl, Roger (ed.) (2003) Austrian Economics and Entrepreneurial Studies: Advances in Austrian Economics, Volume 6 (Amsterdam: JAI Press), pp. 267-70. ISBN 0-7623-1041-3. ISSN 1529-2134.

70. ‘Institutions as Repositories of Knowledge: Some Milestones in the Evolution of an Idea’, Économie appliquée, 56(3), September 2003, pp. 211-27. ISSN 0013-0494.

69. ‘John R. Commons and the Foundations of Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Issues, 37(3), September 2003, pp. 547-76. ISSN 0021-3624.

68. ‘The Enforcement of Contracts and Property Rights: Constitutive versus Epiphenomenal Conceptions of Law’, International Review of Sociology, 13(2), July 2003, pp. 373-89.

ISSN 0390-6701.

67. ‘Capitalism, Complexity, and Inequality’, Journal of Economic Issues, 37(2), June 2003, pp. 471-8. ISSN 0021-3624.

66. ‘The Mystery of the Routine: The Darwinian Destiny of An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change’, Revue Économique, 54(2), Mars 2003, pp. 355-84. ISSN 0033-2764.

65. ‘The Hidden Persuaders: Institutions and Individuals in Economic Theory’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 27(2), March 2003, pp. 159-75. ISSN 0309-166X.

64. ‘Darwinism and Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Issues, 37(1), March 2003, pp. 85-97. ISSN 0021-3624.

63. ‘Darwinism in Economics: From Analogy to Ontology’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 12(2), June 2002, pp. 259-81. ISSN 0936-9937 (print) ISSN 1432-1386 (online).

62. ‘The Evolution of Institutions: An Agenda for Future Theoretical Research’, Constitutional Political Economy, 13(2), June 2002, pp. 111-27. ISSN 1043-4062.

61. ‘The Legal Nature of the Firm and the Myth of the Firm-Market Hybrid’, International Journal of the Economics of Business, 9(1), February 2002, pp. 37-60. ISSN 1357-1516.

60. ‘Darwin, Veblen and the Problem of Causality in Economics’, History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences, 23(3/4), 2001, pp. 383-422. ISSN 0391-9714.

59. ‘Frontiers of Institutional Economics’, New Political Economy, 6(2), July 2001, pp. 245-9.

ISSN 1356-3467.

58. ‘The Concept of Emergence in Social Science: Its History and Importance’, Emergence: A Journal of Complexity Issues in Organizations and Management, 2(4), 2000, pp. 65-77.

57. ‘What is the Essence of Institutional Economics?’, Journal of Economic Issues, 34(2), June 2000, pp. 317-29.

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56. ‘The Marketing of Wisdom: Resource-Advantage Theory’, Journal of Macromarketing, 20(1), June 2000, pp. 68-72.

55. (With Harry Rothman) ‘The Editors and Authors of Economics Journals: A Case of Institutional Oligopoly?’, Economic Journal, 109(2), February 1999, pp. F165-86.

54. ‘Institutions and the Viability of Macroeconomics: Some Perspectives on the Transformation Process in Post-Communist Economies’, Journal of Institutional Innovation, Development and Transition, 2, 1998, pp. 5-18.

53. ‘Socialism Against Markets? A Critique of Two Recent Proposals’, Economy and Society, 27(4), November 1998, pp. 450-76.

52. ‘On the Evolution of Thorstein Veblen’s Evolutionary Economics’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 22(3), July 1998, pp. 415-31.

51. ‘Competence and Contract in the Theory of the Firm’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 35(2), April 1998, pp. 179-201.

50. ‘The Approach of Institutional Economics’, Journal of Economic Literature, 36(1), March 1998, pp. 166-92.

49. ‘Evolutionary and Competence-Based Theories of the Firm’, Journal of Economic Studies, 25(1), 1998, pp. 25-56.

48. ‘The Evolution of Capitalism from the Perspective of Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’ (in Japanese), The Keizai Seminar, no. 516, January 1998, pp. 64-72. (The Keizai Seminar has a circulation of about 10,000 in Japan.)

47. ‘Economics and the Return to Mecca: The Recognition of Novelty and Emergence’, Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 8, 1997, pp. 399-412.

46. ‘What Lies Beyond Capitalism?’ (review article), International Review of Applied Economics, 11(3), 1997, pp. 491-5.

45. ‘The Ubiquity of Habits and Rules’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 21(6), November 1997, pp. 663-84.

44. ‘The Evolutionary and Non-Darwinian Economics of Joseph Schumpeter’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 7(2), June 1997, pp. 131-45.

43. ‘The Challenge of Evolutionary Economics’, Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 152(4), 1996, pp. 697-706.

42. ‘An Evolutionary Theory of Long-Term Economic Growth’, International Studies Quarterly, 40, 1996, pp. 393-410.

41. ‘Varieties of Capitalism and Varieties of Economic Theory’, Review of International Political Economy, 3(3), Autumn 1996, pp. 381-434.

40. ‘The Evolution of Evolutionary Economics’ (review article), Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 42(4), November 1995, pp. 469-88.

39. ‘The Political Economy of Utopia’, Review of Social Economy, 53(2), Summer 1995, pp.

195-213.

38. ‘Varieties of Capitalism from the Perspectives of Veblen and Marx’, Journal of Economic Issues, 29(2), June 1995, pp. 575-84.

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37. ‘The State, Money, and Spontaneous Order’ (a review essay on S. Horwitz, Monetary Evolution, Free Banking, and Economic Order), Critical Review, 8(4), Fall 1994, pp. 579- 89.

36. ‘The Evolution of Socio-Economic Order in the Move to a Market Economy’, Review of International Political Economy, 1(3), Autumn, 1994, pp. 387-404.

35. ‘Optimisation and Evolution: Winter’s Critique of Friedman Revisited’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 18(4), August 1994, pp. 413-30.

34. ‘Some Remarks on “Economic Imperialism” and International Political Economy’, Review of International Political Economy, 1(1), Spring 1994, pp. 21-8.

33. ‘Why the Problem of Reductionism in Biology has Implications for Economics’, World Futures, 37(2-3), 1993, pp. 69-90.

32. ‘Theories of Economic Evolution: A Preliminary Taxonomy’, The Manchester School of Economic and Social Studies, 61(2), June 1993, pp. 125-43.

31. ‘The Economy as An Organism - Not a Machine’, Futures, 25(4), May 1993, pp. 392-403.

30. ‘The Mecca of Alfred Marshall’, The Economic Journal, 103(2), March 1993, pp. 406-15.

29. ‘Institutional Economics: Surveying the “Old” and the “New”‘, Metroeconomica, 44(1), February 1993, pp. 1-28.

28. ‘Marx, Engels, and Economic Evolution’, International Journal of Social Economics, 19, 1992, pp. 121-8.

27. ‘Carl Menger’s Theory of the Evolution of Money: Some Problems’, Review of Political Economy, 4(4), October 1992, pp. 396-412.

26. ‘Thorstein Veblen and Post-Darwinian Economics’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 16(3), September 1992, pp. 285-301.

25. ‘The Reconstruction of Economics: Is There Still a Place for Neoclassical Theory?’, Journal of Economic Issues, 26(3), September 1992, pp 749-67.

24. ‘Economic Evolution: Intervention Contra Pangloss’, Journal of Economic Issues, 25(2), June 1991, pp. 519-33.

23. ‘Hayek’s Theory of Cultural Evolution: An Evaluation in the Light of Vanberg’s Critique’, Economics and Philosophy, 7(1), April 1991, pp. 67-82.

22. ‘Institutional Economic Theory: The Old Versus the New’, Review of Political Economy, November 1989.

21. (With Derek C. Jones) ‘Codetermination: A Partial Review of Theory and Evidence’, Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics, 1989.

20. ‘Institutional Rigidities and Economic Growth’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 13(1), March 1989, pp. 79-101.

19. ‘Economic Pluralism and Self-Management’, in D. C. Jones and J. Svejnar (eds),

Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labour Managed Firms, Vol. 2, 1987.

18. ‘Economics and Systems Theory’, Journal of Economic Studies, 14(4), 1987.

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17. ‘Behind Methodological Individualism’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 10(3), September 1986.

16. ‘The Rationalist Conception of Action’, Journal of Economic Issues, 19(4), December 1985.

15. ‘Worker Participation and Macroeconomic Efficiency’, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Winter 1982-83.

14. ‘Theoretical and Policy Implications of Variable Productivity’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 6(3), September 1982.

13. ‘Marx Without the Labour Theory of Value’, Review of Radical Political Economics, Summer 1982.

12. ‘On the Political Economy of the Socialist Transformation’, New Left Review, No. 133, May-June 1982.

11. ‘Money and the Sraffa System’, Australian Economic Papers, June 1981.

10. ‘On Exploitation and Labor-Value’, Science and Society, Summer 1981.

9. ‘A Theory of Exploitation Without the Labour Theory of Value’, Science and Society, Fall 1980.

8. ‘Om Grundlaget for en Teori om Kapitalistic Udbytning’, Nordisk Tidskrift for Politisk Ekonomi (Nordic Review of Political Economy), No. 6, 1978.

7. ‘Papering Over the Cracks: Comments on Fine and Harris’ Survey of the Current Controversy within Marxian Economics’, Socialist Register, 1977.

6. ‘Sraffa, Value and Distribution’, British Review of Economic Issues, No.1, November 1977.

5. (With Ian Steedman) ‘Depreciation of Machines of Changing Efficiency: A Note’, Australian Economic Papers, June 1977.

4. ‘Exploitation and Embodied Labour Time’, Bulletin of the Conference of Socialist Economists, March 1976.

3. ‘Fixed Capital and Value Analysis’ (with Ian Steedman), Bulletin of the Conference of Socialist Economists, June 1975.

2. ‘Marxian Epistemology and the Transformation Problem’, Economy and Society, November 1974.

1. ‘The Theory of the Falling Rate of Profit’, New Left Review, No. 84, March-April 1974.

Notes and Comments in Academic Journals

41. ‘Clarifying Generalized Darwinism: A reply to Scholz and Reydon’, Organization Studies, 34(7), July 2013. 1001-1005, doi:10.1177/0170840613485862

40. ‘The Enduring Relevance of Darwin’s Theory of Morality’, BioScience, July 2013.

39. ‘Sex on the Brain: Some Comments on “Love, War and Cultures: An Institutional Approach to Human Evolution”’, Journal of Bioeconomics, 15(1), 2013, pp. 91-95.

38. ‘Editorial Introduction to “Ownership” by A, M. Honoré’, Journal of Institutional Economics, 9(2), June 2013, pp. 223-6. DOI: 10.1017/S174413741200032X.

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37. ‘From Social Theory to Explaining Sickonomics: A Response to Dimitris Milonakis and Ben Fine’, Review of Social Economy, 70(4). December 2012, pp. 492-507.

doi.org/10.1080/00346764.2012.690608.

36. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Underqualified – Maximal Generality in Darwinian

Explanation: A Response to Matt Gers’, Biology and Philosophy, 2012, 27(4), pp. 607-14.

35. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Please May We Join the Veblen Club? – A Response to John Hall’, Journal of Economic Issues, 46(1), March 2012, pp. 241-2.

34. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Agreeing on Generalised Darwinism: A Response to Pavel Pelikan’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 22(1), 2012, pp. 9-18.

33. (With Mark Blyth, Orion Lewis, and Sven Steinmo), ‘Introduction to the Special Issue on the Evolution of Institutions’, Journal of Institutional Economics¸ 7(3), September 2011, pp. 299-315.

32. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Poverty of stimulus and absence of cause: some questions for Felin and Foss’, Journal of Institutional Economics¸ 7(2), June 2011, pp. 295-8.

31. Introduction and annotations to 'The Limitations of Marginal Utility' by Thorstein Veblen, Journal of Institutional Economics, 5(3), December 2009, pp. 379-97.

30. Editorial introduction to ‘Marx To-Day: Capitalism and Socialism’ by John R. Commons, Journal of Institutional Economics, 5(1), April 2009, pp. 117-36. ISSN 1744-1374.

29. ‘After 1929 Economics Changed: Will Economists Wake up in 2009?’ Real-World Economics Review, no. 48, 6 December 2008, pp. 273-278,

http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue48/Hodgson48.pdf

28. Editorial introduction to W. Jethro Brown, ‘The Personality of the Corporation and the State’, Journal of Institutional Economics, 4(2), August 2008, pp. 255-73. ISSN 1744- 1374.

27. Editorial introduction to ‘Capital’ by Frank A. Fetter, Journal of Institutional Economics, 4(1), April 2008, pp. 127-37. ISSN 1744-1374.

26. (With Ian Gough, Garry Runciman, Ruth Mace and Michael Rustin), ‘Darwinian

Evolutionary Theory and the Social Sciences’, 21st Century Society, 3(1), February 2008, pp. 65-86.

25. An Interview with Oliver Williamson, Journal of Institutional Economics, 3(3), December 2007, pp. 373-86. ISSN 1744-1374.

24. Hodgson, G. ‘¿Desconocemos los hechos cuando son inconvenientes? Respuesta al profesor Gorbaneff’ (‘Do we ignore the facts if they are inconvenient? A reply to Professor Gorbaneff’), Revista de Economía Institucional, 9, no. 16, 2007, pp. 329-332.

23. (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Evolutionary Theorizing Beyond Lamarckism: A Reply to Richard Nelson’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 17(3), June 2007, pp. 353-9. ISSN 0936-9937 (print) ISSN 1432-1386 (online).

22. Editorial introduction to ‘The Impossibility of Social Democracy’ by Albert E. F. Schäffle, Journal of Institutional Economics, 3(1), April 2007, pp. 113-25. ISSN 1744-1374.

21. ‘A Response to Christian Cordes and Clifford Poirot’, Journal of Economic Issues, 41(1), March 2007, pp. 265-76.

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20. ‘Rationality versus Program-Based Behavior’, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30(1), February 2007, pp. 29-30. ISSN: 0140-525X. EISSN: 1469-1825.

19 (With Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘Cultural Evolution is More than Neurological Evolution’, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 29(4), August 2006, pp. 356-7. ISSN: 0140-525X. EISSN:

1469-1825.

18. Editorial introduction to ‘Economic Theory and Economic History’, by Werner Sombart, Journal of Institutional Economics, 2(1), April 2006, pp. 109-12. ISSN 1744-1374.

17. ‘Characterizing Institutional and Heterodox Economics – A Reply to Tony Lawson’, Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review, 2(2), March 2006, pp. 213-33. ISSN 1349-4961.

16. Editorial introduction to ‘Institution’, by Walton H. Hamilton, Journal of Institutional Economics, 1(2), December 2005, pp. 233-5. ISSN 1744-1374.

15. Editorial for first issue of Journal of Institutional Economics, 1(1), June 2005, pp. i-ii.

ISSN 1744-1374.

14. Editorial introduction to ‘The Present Position in Economics’, by Alfred Marshall, Journal of Institutional Economics, 1(1), June 2005, pp. 121-4.

13. ‘Welcoming the Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review’, Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review, 1(1), November 2004, pp. 3-4. ISSN 1349-4961.

12. ‘Hayekian Evolution Reconsidered: A Response to Caldwell’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 28(2), March 2004, pp. 291-300. ISSN 0309-166X.

11. ‘A Comment on the Paper by Joseph Henrich’, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 53(1), January 2004, pp. 81-4. ISSN 0960-6491.

10. ‘Visions of Mainstream Economics: A Response to Richard Nelson and Jack Vromen’, Review of Social Economy, 60(1), March 2002, pp. 125-33. ISSN 0034-6764.

9. ‘Capitalism, Employment, and Complexity: With Further Critical Comments on Another Hodgson’, Journal of Economic Issues, 36(1), March 2002, pp. 190-6. ISSN 0021-3624.

8. ‘A Brief Response to Jürgen Lange-von Kulessa’, Journal of Economic Methodology, 6(3), 1999.

7. ‘A Reply to Howard Sherman’, Review of Social Economy, 56(3), Fall 1998, pp. 295-306.

6. ‘Ernest Mandel: 1923-1995’, Economic Journal, 107(1), January 1997, pp. 159-64.

5. ‘Some Responses to Jennings and Waller’, Journal of Economic Issues, 30(4), December 1996, pp. 1163-8.

4. ‘Land, Learning and the Nature of Spatiality’, Environment and Planning A, 28(11), November 1996, pp. 1940-42.

3. ‘Economics and Evolution: A Reply to Lawrence Moss’, Marshall Studies Bulletin, 5, 1995, pp. 41-50.

2. ‘A Response to Robert E. Lane’, Journal of Economic Issues, September 1993.

1. ‘On Informational Reductionism: A Reply to Kay’, Journal of Economic Issues, March 1988.

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Articles in Books

84. ‘The Building of the Foundations of Institutional Economics: Evolution, Emergence and Selection in the Early History of Institutionalism’ in K. Nielsen and C. A. Koch (eds) Institutionalism in Economics and Sociology – Variety, Dialogue and Future Challenges, (Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA: Edward Elgar) (forthcoming).

83. ‘Epilogue’ in K. Nielsen and C. A. Koch (eds) Institutionalism in Economics and

Sociology – Variety, Dialogue and Future Challenges (Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA: Edward Elgar) (forthcoming).

82. ‘Organizational Adaptation and Evolution: Darwinism versus Lamarckism?’ in Anna Grandori (ed.) (2013) Handbook of Economic Organization: Integrating Economic and Organization Theory (Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA: Edward Elgar), pp. 157-71.

81. ‘Institutional/Evolutionary Economics and Environmental Policy’, in Marletto, Gerardo (ed.) Creating a Sustainable Economy: An Institutional and Evolutionary Approach to Environmental Policy (London and New York: Routledge), pp. 92-114. ISBN 978-0-415- 61076-6.

80. ‘Thorstein Veblen: The Father of Evolutionary and Institutional Economics’, in Erik S.

Reinert and Francesca Lidia Viano (eds) (2012) Thorstein Veblen: Economics for an Age of Crises (Anthem), pp. 283-95.

79. ‘From Utilitarianism to Evolution in Ecological Economics’, in Julien-François Gerber and Rolf Sreppacher (eds) (2012) Toward an Integrated Paradigm for Heterodox Economics (London: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 147-67. ISBN 978-0-230-30358-4.

78. ‘Albert Schäffle’s Critique of Socialism’, in John Vint, J. Stanley Metcalfe, Heinz D.

Kurz, Neri Salvadori and Paul A. Samuelson (eds) (2010), Economic Theory and Economic Thought: Essays in Honour of Ian Steedman (London and New York:

Routledge), pp. 296-315.

77. ‘Que’est-ce-qu’ne firme?’, in Bernard Baudry and Benjamin Dubrion (eds) (2009) Analyses et transformations de la firme (Paris : La Découverte), pp. 21-40. [ISBN 978-2- 7071-5801-7].

76. ‘The Nature and Replication of Routines’, in Markus C. Becker and Nathalie Lazaric (eds) (2009) Organizational Routines: Advancing Empirical Research (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar), pp. 26-44. [ISBN 978 1 84720 194 2.]

75. ‘The Emergence of the Idea of Institutions as Repositories of Knowledge’, in Ebner, Alexander and Beck, Nikolaus (eds) (2008) The Institutions of the Market: Organizations, Social Systems, and Governance (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 23-39. ISBN-13:

978-0-19-923143-0. ISBN-13: 978-0-19-923142-3.

74. (with Thorbjørn Knudsen) ‘The Complex Evolution of a Simple Traffic Convention: the Functions and Implications of Habit’, in János Kornai, Lásló Mátyás and Gérard Roland (eds) (2008) Institutional Change and Economic Behaviour (Basingstoke and New York:

Palgrave Macmillan for International Economic Association), pp. 178-99. [ISBN 978 0 230 54698 1].

73. ‘Marshall, Schumpeter and the Shifting Boundaries of Economics and Sociology’, in Yuichi Shionoya and Tamotsu Nishizawa (eds) (2008) Marshall and Schumpeter on

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Evolution: Economic Sociology of Capitalist Development (Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA: Edward Elgar), pp. 93-115. [ISBN 978 1 84720 813 2]

72. ‘Fifteen Years of Economic Transition’, in Schönbäck, Wilfred, Blaas, Wolfgang and Bröthhaler, Johann (eds) (2008) Sozioökonomie als multidisziplinärer Forschungsansatz:

Eine Gedenkschrift für Egon Matzner (New York and Vienna: Springer), pp. 89-95. ISBN 978 3 211 69923 2.

71. ‘The Enforcement of Contracts and Property Rights: Constitutive versus Epiphenomenal Conceptions of Law’ in Harvey, Mark, Ramoglan, Ronnie and Randles, Sally (2007) Karl Polanyi: New Perspectives on the Place of the Economy in Society (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press), pp. 58-77. ISBN 978 0 7190 7332 8.

70. ‘Some Myths of Veblenian Institutionalism’, in Janet T. Knoedler, Robert E. Prasch and Dell P. Champlin (eds) (2007) Thorstein Veblen and the Revival of Free Market

Capitalism (Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA: Edward Elgar), pp. 127-47. ISBN 978 1 84542 540 1.

69. ‘The Problem of Historical Specificity’, in Stavros Ioannides and Klaus Nielsen (eds) (2007) Economics and the Social Sciences: Boundaries, Interaction and Integration (Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA: Edward Elgar), pp. 112-38. ISBN 978 1 84064 790 7.

68. ‘Institutional Economics and the Analysis of Work’, in Marek Korczynski, Randy Hodson and Paul Edwards (eds) (2006) Social Theory at Work (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 208-32. ISBN 0-19-928597-7; 0-19-928598-5.

67. ‘Decomposition and Growth: Biological Metaphors in Economics from the 1880s to the 1980s’, in Kurt Dopfer (ed.) (2005), The Evolutionary Foundations of Economics

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 105-48. ISBN 0-521-62199-2.

66. ‘Institutions and Economic Development: Constraining, Enabling and Reconstituting’ in Gary Dymski and Silvana De Paula (eds) (2005) Reimagining Growth: Towards a Renewal of Development Theory (London and New York: Zed Books), pp. 85-98. ISBN 1-84277- 584-7 (hbk). ISBN 1-84277-585-5 (pbk).

65. ‘Can Economics Start from the Individual Alone?’, in Fullbrook, Edward (ed.) (2004) A Guide to What’s Wrong With Economics (London: Anthem), pp. 57-67. ISBN 1-84331- 148-8.

64. ‘Darwinian Evolutionary Economics and the Concept of the Routine’, in Marco Lehmann- Waffenschmidt, Alexander Ebner, and Dirk Fornahl (eds) (2004) Institutioneller Wandel, Marktpozesse und dynamische Wirtschaftspolitik (Marburg: Metropolis), pp. 53-77. ISBN 3-89518-468-3.

63. ‘Thorstein Veblen and the Machine Process’, in Argyrous, George, Forstater, Mathew and Mongiovi, Gary (eds) (2004) Growth, Distribution and Effective Demand: Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell, (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe), pp. 261-78. ISBN 0-7656-1009-4.

62. ‘How Did Economics Get into Such a State?’ in Fullbrook, Edward (ed.) (2003) The Crisis in Economics: The Post-Autistic Movement: The First 600 Days (London and New York: Routledge), pp. 143-6. ISBN 0-415-30897-6 (hbk). ISBN 0-415-30898-4 (pbk).

61. ‘Institutional Blindness in Modern Economics’, in J. Rogers Hollingsworth, Karl H.

Müller and Ellen Jane Hollingsworth (eds) (2002) Advancing Socio-Economics: An

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Institutionalist Perspective (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield), pp. 147-70. ISBN 0- 7425-1176-6.

60. ‘Institutional Economics and the Problem of Historical Specificity’ for Heino H. Nau (ed.) (2002) The Historicity of Economics: Continuities and Discontinuities of Historical

Thought in 19th and 20th Century Economics (Berlin: Springer), pp. 92-125. ISSN 1431- 8822. ISBN 3-540-42765-1.

59. ‘Reconstitutive Downward Causation: Social Structure and the Development of Individual Agency’ in Fullbrook, Edward (ed.) (2002) Intersubjectivity in Economics: Agents and Structures (London and New York: Routledge), pp. 159-180. ISBN 0-415-26697-1 (hbk).

ISBN 0-415-26698-X (pbk).

58. ‘General Theorising versus Historical Specificity: A Problem for Post-Keynesians’, in Arestis, Philip, Desai, Meghnad and Dow, Sheila (eds) (2002) Methodology,

Microeconomics and Keynes: Essays in Honour of Victoria Chick, Volume Two (London and New York: Routledge), pp. 51-61. ISBN 0-415-23219-8.

57. ‘How Can Evolutionary Economics Evolve?’, in Aruka, Y. (ed.) (2001) Evolutionary Controversies in Economics: A New Transdisciplinary Approach, Springer, Tokyo, pp. 23- 40. ISBN 4-431-70303-9.

56. ‘The Evolution of Capitalism from the Perspective of Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’, in Hodgson, Geoffrey M., Itoh, Makoto and Yokokawa, Nobuharu (eds) (2001) Capitalism in Evolution: Global Contentions – East and West, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 63-82. ISBN 1-85898-860-8 (hbk).

55. ‘Is Social Evolution Lamarckian or Darwinian?’ in Laurent, John and Nightingale, John (eds) (2001) Darwinism and Evolutionary Economics, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 87- 118. ISBN 1-84064-2092.

54. ‘Frank Knight as an Institutional Economist’, in Jeff E. Biddle, John B. Davis and Steven G. Medema (eds) (2001), Economics Broadly Considered: Essays in Honor of Warren J.

Samuels, London and New York: Routledge, pp. 64-93. ISBN 0-415-23672-X.

53. ‘From Veblen to Galbraith: What is the Essence of Institutional Economics?’ in Michael Keaney (ed.) (2001) Economist with a Public Purpose: Essays in Honour of John Kenneth Galbraith, London and New York: Routledge, pp. 95-114. ISBN 0-415-21292-8.

52. ‘From Micro to Macro: The Concept of Emergence and the Role of Institutions’, in Burlamaqui, Leonardo, Castro, Ana Célia and Chang, Ha-Joon (eds) (2000) Institutions and the Role of the State, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 103-26.

51. ‘Socio-Economic Consequences of the Advance of Complexity and Knowledge’, in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (2000) The Creative Society of the 21st Century, OECD: Paris, pp. 89-112. (Also in German and French editions.)

50. ‘Shackle and Institutional Economics: Some Bridges and Barriers’, in P. E. Earl and S. F.

Frowen (eds) (2000) Economics as an Art of Thought: Essays in Memory of G. L. S.

Shackle, Routledge, London, pp. 51-75.

49. ‘Post Keynesianism and Institutionalism: Another Look at the Link’, in M. Setterfield (ed.) (1999) Growth, Employment and Inflation: Essays in Honour of John Cornwall, Macmillan: London, pp. 72-87.

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48. ‘The Evolution of Capitalism from the Perspective of Institutional and Evolutionary Economics’, in N. Yokokawa, M. Noguchi and M. Itoh (eds) (1998) Capitalism in Evolution, Tokyo (in Japanese).

47. ‘Some Possible Differences Between American and European Institutionalism’, in D.

James and J. Mogab (eds) (1998) Technology, Innovation, and Industrial Economics:

Institutionalist Perspectives, Boston, Kluwer, pp. 127-46.

46. ‘Veblen’s Theory of the Leisure Class and the Genesis of Evolutionary Economics’, in Warren J. Samuels (ed.) (1998) The Founding of Evolutionary Economics (London:

Routledge), pp. 170-200.

45. ‘Dichotimizing the Dichotomy: Veblen versus Ayres’ in S. Fayazmanesh and M. Tool (eds) (1998) Institutionalist Method and Value, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 48-73.

44. ‘Varieties of Capitalism and Varieties of Economic Theory’, in K. Nielsen and B. Johnson (eds) Institutions and Economic Change: New Perspectives on Markets, Firms and

Technology, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 1998, pp. 215-42.

43. ‘The Coasean Tangle: The Nature of the Firm and the Problem of Historical Specificity’, in S. G. Medema (ed.) (1998), Coasean Economics: Law and Economics and the New Institutional Economics, Kluwer: Boston, pp. 23-49.

42. ‘The Viability of Institutional Economics’ (in Russian), in Evolutionary Economics on the Eve of the 21st Century, Moscow: Centre for Evolutionary Economics, 1997.

41. ‘Economics and Evolution and the Evolution of Economics’, in J. Reijnders (ed.) Economics and Evolution, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 1997, pp. 9-40.

40. ‘Biology and Economics’ in P. Weingart, S. D. Mitchell, P. J. Richerson and S. Maasen (eds), Human By Nature: Between Biology and the Social Sciences, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ, 1997, pp. 47-51.

39. ‘Institutionalismus: Nationale Schulen oder internationale Strömungen?’

[‘Institutionalism: National Schools or International Movement?’] in Schefold, Bertram (ed.) (1997) Vademucum zu einen klassiker des Skandinavischen Institutionalismus: Johan Åkerman ‘Das Problem der sozialökonomischen Synthese’ (Düsseldorf: Verlag Wirtschaft und Finanzen), pp. 109-29.

38. ‘Economics, Environmental Policy and the Transcendence of Utilitarianism’ in Foster, John (ed.) (1997) Valuing Nature? Ethics, Economics and the Environment (London:

Routledge), pp. 48-63.

37. ‘The Fate of the Cambridge Capital Controversy’, in P. Arestis and M. C. Sawyer (eds) Capital Controversy, Post Keynesian Economics and the History of Economics: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt, London, Routledge, 1997, pp. 95-110.

36. ‘Metaphor and Pluralism in Economics: Mechanics and Biology’, in A. Salanti and E.

Screpanti (eds) Pluralism in Economics: New Perspectives in History and Methodology, Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 1997, pp. 131-54.

35. ‘Institutional Economics: Old and New’ in George Argyrous and Frank Stilwell (eds), Economics as a Social Science: Readings in Political Economy, Pluto, London, 1996, pp.

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