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OverviewFew issues are more central to our present predicaments than the relationship between economics and politics. In the century after Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations the British economy was transformed. After Adam Smith looks at how politics and political economy were articulated and altered. It considers how grand ideas about the connections between individual liberty, free markets, and social and economic justice sometimes attributed to Smith are as much the product of gradual modifications and changes wrought by later writers. Thomas Robert Malthus, David Ricardo, James Mill, John Stuart Mill, and other liberals, radicals, and reformers had a hand in conceptual transformations that culminated in the advent of neoclassical economics. The population problem, the declining importance of agriculture, the consequences of industrialization, the structural characteristics of civil society, the role of the state in economic affairs, and the possible limits to progress were questions that underwent significant readjustments as the thinkers who confronted them in different times and circumstances reworked the framework of ideas advanced by Smith - transforming the dialogue between politics and political economy. By the end of the nineteenth century an industrialized and globalized market economy had firmly established itself. By exploring how questions Smith had originally grappled with were recast as the economy and the principles of political economy altered during the nineteenth century, this book demonstrates that we are as much the heirs of later images of Smith as we are of Smith himself. Many writers helped shape different ways of thinking about economics and politics after Adam Smith. By ignoring their interventions we risk misreading our past - and also misusing it - when thinking about the choices at the interface of economics and politics that confront us today. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Murray Milgate , Shannon C. StimsonPublisher: Princeton University Press Imprint: Princeton University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.595kg ISBN: 9780691140377ISBN 10: 0691140375 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 23 August 2009 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Replaced By: 9781400831012 Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Language: English Table of ContentsPreface vii CHAPTER ONE: Introduction 1 CHAPTER TWO: Adam Smith's Political Odyssey 10 CHAPTER THREE: The Rise and Fall of Civil Society 33 CHAPTER FOUR: Economic Life and Political Life 60 CHAPTER FIVE: The Economic Machine and the Invisible Hand 77 CHAPTER SIX: The Figure of Smith 97 CHAPTER SEVEN: Population and Political Economy 121 CHAPTER EIGHT: Utility, Property, and Political Participation 139 CHAPTER NINE: Economic Opinion on Parliamentary Reform 160 CHAPTER TEN: Utopias and Stationary States 186 CHAPTER ELEVEN: Labour Defended 217 CHAPTER TWELVE: Individual Liberty and the Liberty of Trade 237 CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Two Critiques of Classical Political Economy 258 References 269 Index 299ReviewsThis is an important, sound analysis of the interrelation between political and economic theory in the century after Adam Smith... This book exemplifies the best contemporary work on the nexus of political and economic theory. Choice Author InformationMurray Milgate is fellow at Queens' College, University of Cambridge. Shannon C. Stimson is professor of political science and the history of political thought at the University of California, Berkeley. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |