|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ma Ying (Wuhan University, China) , Hans-Michael Trautwein (University of Oldenburg, Germany)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.498kg ISBN: 9781138908505ISBN 10: 1138908509 Pages: 352 Publication Date: 04 March 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"1. Introduction, Ying Ma and Hans-Michael Trautwein 2. Physiocracy and the Chinese Model: Was Europe Borrowing from Chinese Political Economy?, Stephan Gaarsmand Jacobsen 3. The Reception of Adam Smith in East Asia: A Comparative Perspective, Qunyi Liu 4. Commodities, Natural Resources and Growth: A Study through the History of Economics, Mauro Boianovsky 5. Yan Fu, Individualism and Social Order: Translating Western Ideas at the Dawn of the 20th Century, Yang Cui and Evelyn Forget 6. Three Influent Western Thinkers during the ""Breakup"" Period in China: Eucken, Bergson and Dewey, Gilles Campagnolo 7. Chinese Tradition Meets Western Economics: Tang Qingzeng and his Legacy, Olga Borokh 8. He Lian, a Founder and Practitioner of Chinization of Western Economics: A Study with a Focus on his Activities at the Nankai Institute of Economics, Jianbo Zhou, Liu Yang and Jingyu Feng 9. Chinese Economics Students in America – with a Focus on Doctoral Dissertations prior to 1949, Jinwen Zou and Lizhi Song 10. Development Theory and Transition, Massimo Ricottilli 11. Thirty Years of Disputes on China’s Economic Reform, Xibao Guo and Ping Zhang 12. Northian Perspectives on China’s Economic Reform, Weisen Li and Hans Michael Trautwein 13. Chinese Reform and Schools of Thought in Western Economics: Chicago School versus Principal Agent Theory, Matthias Klaes and Yi Zhang 14. The East Asian Development Model Reconsidered: Which Lessons for China?, Yongqin Wang 15. The Changing Status of Western Economics in China, Fuqian Fang 16. The Transmission of Heterodox Economics in China, 1949-2009, Lin Zhang and Yingli Xu"ReviewsWe can only try to encourage the reading public in general, as well as managers in particular, interested in these areas of the world, to spend some time examining them in greater depth in such publications than just in summaries and glosses in the financial press and other related media. Scholars, MBAs and doctoral students will find much that is intellectually stimulating in the above works reviewed here . - Malcolm Warner, Judge Business School, University of Cambridge We can only try to encourage the reading public in general, as well as managers in particular, interested in these areas of the world, to spend some time examining them in greater depth in such publications than just in summaries and glosses in the financial press and other related media. Scholars, MBAs and doctoral students will find much that is intellectually stimulating in the above works reviewed here. - Malcolm Warner, Judge Business School, University of Cambridge Author InformationYing Ma is a Professor of Economics at School of Economics and Management, Wuhan University. He is also the Deputy Director of the Center for Economic Development Research (CEDR), Wuhan University. He was a Visiting Scholar to Harvard University from August 1991 to October 1992 and again from August 1999 to August 2000. He was given a six-month fellowship under the EU-China Higher Education Cooperation Programme to conduct research in Universite de Marne-la-vallee. His research interests include business cycles in developed countries, fiscal transfers as regional policy tools in Germany and the EU, thoughts of the German Historical School on economic development and fundamental theories and methodology of the structuralist approach to development economics. Hans-Michael Trautwein is Professor of International Economics and the China Commissioner at the University of Oldenburg. He is also director of the Center for Transnational Studies (ZenTra) of the Universities of Bremen and Oldenburg. His research interests include the transnationalisation of finance and production, monetary integration and economic development, comparative evaluations of modern and older approaches to monetary macroeconomics, and the history of economic thought. He has been visiting professor at Wuhan University and at various universities and research institutes in Europe and South America. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |