期刊名称:HISTORY OF ECONOMIC IDEAS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal

History of Economic Ideas is a new international series of Quaderni di storia dell'economia politica, a journal founded in 1983 to promote collaboration between scholars who share an historical approach to the major issues, the various "revolutions" which have left their mark on economics and the spread of economic ideas beyond the narrow circle of specialists. History of Economic Ideas rejects the dichotomy between "analysis" and "culture": both aspects are of equal importance for a wider understanding of the subject. In a period such as our own, where paradigms which once seemed unshakeable are now being challenged, a multidisciplinary analysis of the historical development of economics might contribute to shedding light on the issues at the root of current debate. Besides essays and critical surveys, the journal includes archive material and reviews of new books on history of economics. History of Economic Ideas is double-blind peer review.
Instructions to Authors NOTES FOR CONTRIBUTORS
1. Articles should be submitted via e-mail to: The Editor, HEI - History of Economic Ideas, Department of Economics, Faculty of Law, University of Pisa, via Curtatone e Montanara 15, 50126 Pisa, Italy; e- mail: hei@ec.unipi.it
2. The paper should be provided in anonymous form, with a separate cover where authors are required to indicate their name, affiliation and e-mail address.
3. Articles should be written in standard English and should not normally exceed 12,000 words, including footnotes and references. An abstract of about 100 words is also required.
4. Authors should carefully check the conformity of their manuscripts to our editorial guidelines. In particular, they should obey the following requirements:
- Non-English words should appear in italics.
- Due attention should be paid to the use of single or double quotation marks. The first are to be used when highlighting a word or expression (e.g., the so-called ‘civilized’ society), the second only when reporting another author’s word or expression (e.g., Smith’s «impartial spectator»).
- Full quotations should be between « ». If their length exceeds 40 words they should be displayed as separate from the main text. Please refer to one of our issues to see how this should be done.
5. References should be listed at the end of the paper as follows:
- Weintraub E. R. 1991, Stabilizing Dynamics: Constructing Economic Knowledge, Cambridge and New York, Cambridge UP.
- Shionoya Y. (ed.) 2001, The German Historical School, London and New York, Routledge.
- Schumpeter J. A. 1950, «The March into Socialism», American Economic Review, 40, 2, 446-456.
- Samuels W. J. 1997, «The case for methodological pluralism», in A. Salanti and E. Screpanti (eds) 1997, Pluralism in Economics, Cheltenham and Brookfield, Edward Elgar, 67-79. [Or: in Salanti and Screpanti (eds) 1997, 67-79 in case the volume is separately listed in the references].
- Costa G. 2001, «Solow on exogenous and endogenous growth, and the Swan proposition», Studi e Ricerche, Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche, Università di Pisa, n. 83.
6. References in text and footnotes should normally be written as: Weintraub 1991, 15-18. The bracketed form Weintraub (1991, 15-18) should be used when the reference is part of a sentence. Please, avoid the use of p. or pp.
7. When quoting from, or making reference to, either reprinted or translated material, the main reference should always be made to the edition the quotations are taken from, while the year of the original edition should be put between square brackets. For example:
- in text: Keynes 1973 [1936], 126
- in footnotes: Keynes 1973 [1936], 126.
- in the references: Keynes J. M. 1973 [1936], The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, London, Macmillan for the Royal Economic Society.
Schumpeter J. A. 1961 [1912], The Theory of Economic Development, Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard UP; original ed. Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung, Leipzig, Duncker & Humblot.
8. Papers failing to satisfy either the linguistic or the editorial requirements will be rejected without consideration. All other papers will be double-refereed.
9. Headers of book reviews should obey the following format:
- John B. Davis, The Theory of the Individual in Economics, London and New York, Routledge, 2003, viii+216.
Editorial Board
Editorial Board/Office
Duccio Cavalieri
Duccio Cavalieri (born in 1935) is a social scientist with wide theoretical interests. Full professor of Political Economy in the University of Florence, since 1977, he has been co-founder and co-editor of “Quaderni di Storia dell'Economia Politica”, “History of Economic Ideas” and “Il Pensiero Economico Italiano”, and is a member of the scientific committee of “Storia del Pensiero Economico”. He is the author of two textbooks - Corso di Economia Politica (2 vols.) and Teoria economica: un'introduzione critica - and of more than 150 scientific publications of economic theory, the history of economic thought, economic methodology and philosophy of economics. His main research interests are presently in the fields of capital theory, post-Keynesian monetary economics and critical Marxism. His latest monograph is Scienza economica e umanesimo positivo: Claudio Napoleoni e la critica della ragione economica (2006).
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