
Collaborative Research in Economics
Description
More details
Other editions
Additional editions


Persons
Lall B. Ramrattan is Instructor at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. He has served as an associate editor of The American Economist , and holds a PhD from the New School for Social Research, USA.
Szenberg and Ramrattan have collaborated on journal articles, encyclopedia entries, and more than 17 books.
Contributors
Walter Adams, Michigan State University, USAWilliam A. Barnett, University of Kansas, USAWilliam J.Baumol, New York University, USAMary Ellen Benedict, Bowling Green State University, USAJames W. Brock, Miami University, USAGraciela Chichilnisky, Columbia University, USADavid Colander, Middlebury College, USARonald G. Ehrenberg, Cornell University, USAStanley Engerman, University of Rochester, USADaniel S. Hamermesh, Royal Holloway University of London, UKGeoffrey Harcourt, Cambridge University, UKRachel McCulloch, Brandeis University, USACharles F. Manski, Northwestern University, USASusan Rose-Ackerman, Yale University, USAPaul Samuelson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USAVernon L. Smith, Chapman University, USAL. G. Telser, University of Chicago, USAW. Kip Viscusi, Vanderbilt University, USARichard Zeckhauser, Harvard University, USA
Content
1. Introduction.- 2. On Collaboration in General Economics.- 3. Reflections on Our Collaborations in Industry Studies.- 4. The Productivity Impact of Collaborative Research in Industrial Economics.- 5. Age, Cohort and Co-Authorship: The Statistics of Collaboration.- 6. Collaborative Choices in Econometrics.- 7. On the Pleasures and Gains of Collaboration in Microeconomics.- 8. A Serial Collaborator.- 9. Collaboration with and without Co-authorship: Rocket Science versus Economic Science.- 10. Why We Collaborate in Mathematical Ways.- 11. Collaborative Is Superadditive in Political Economics.- 12. "Heinz" Harcourt's Collaborations: Over 57 varieties in Post-Keynesian Economics.- 13. Coauthors and Collaborations in Labor Economics.- 14. Two Heads are Better than One, and Three is a Magic Number in Economics.- 15. Why Collaborate inInternational Finance?.- 16. My Collaborations in Game Theory.- 17. Co-Authors in History.- 18. Collaboration: Making Eclecticism Possible in Economic Law and Politics.- 19. Collaboration and the Development of Experimental Economics: A personal perspective.