Richard Ebeling's insightful and highly readable book explains and applies the ideas of the Austrian economists to a wide range of contemporary public policy issues. He combines intellectual political-economic history with the modern Austrian theory of the market process to challenge the premises and uses of mainstream neoclassical economics.
This third volume in the series is divided into four parts. The first presents a symposium on models of socialism, the second presents current research, the third, review essays, and the fourth, book reviews.
CHAPTER 23 e Rejected Legacy: Austria and the Austrian School After e Austrian School effectively ceased to exist on ... with Alexander Mahr as editor, he had to share the role of publisher with Walter Eucken (1891-1950), ...
(1973a) 7, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Elizabeth Johnson and Donald Moggridge (eds.). (1973b) 13 The General Theory and After: PartI Preparation, Donald Moggridge (ed.) (1977) 17, Activities 1920–1922.
Le temps et le capital
An Austro-libertarian Critique of Public Choice
Review of Anarchism, by R. Hoffman, ed., Choice (January 1971): 1577. (Unsigned) “Milton Friedman Unraveled.” Individualist (February 1971): 3–7. “Takeoff,” “Come One! Come All!” “Correction,” “Living Free,” “Recommended Reading.
Economic Science and the Austrian Method
The Essential Rothbard
Here is the neglected path of the genuine free market: a path that has been blazed and fought for all his life by one lone, embattled, distinguished, and dazzlingly creative economist: Ludwig von Mises.
An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought