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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781784713256
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (1 v) , cm
    Series Statement: Elgar research reviews in economics
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Social structure of accumulation theory
    Keywords: Neomarxismus ; Ökonomische Ideengeschichte ; Social structure ; Economic development Social aspects ; Capitalism ; Saving and investment ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In this two-volume set, the editors present seminal articles by leading SSA scholars describing the development of SSA Theory and its wider application. The first volume offers an introduction to SSA theory and covers the historical context, the founding documents of the approach, subsequent theoretical and empirical developments, the relationship between SSA theory and related approaches, and an introduction to the work of Bowles, Gordon and Weisskopf on the rise and demise of the postwar SSA. The second volume examines extensions to the SSA literature: applying SSA analysis to countries outside the United States, placing the history of a wider range of institutions within an SSA framework and current use of SSA analysis. The editors' comprehensive original introduction illuminates the state of SSA Theory up to the present and considers its future applications within further historical and theoretical contexts and in analysing and understanding the unfolding economic turmoil which began in 2007-2008
    Abstract: David M. Gordon (1997), 'From the Drive System to the Capital- Labor Accord: Econometric Tests for the Transition between Productivity Regimes', Industrial Relations, 36 (2), April, 125-59 -- Edwin Melendez (1990), 'Accumulation and Crisis in a Small and Open Economy: The Postwar Social Structure of Accumulation in Puerto Rico', Review of Radical Political Economics, 22 (2-3), 231-51 -- Dimitrios M. Mihail (1993), 'Modelling Profits and Industrial Investment in Postwar Greece', International Review of Applied Economics, 7 (3), 290-310 -- Seongjin Jeong (1997), 'The Social Structure of Accumulation in South Korea: Upgrading or Crumbling?', Review of Radical Political Economics, 29 (4), December, 92-112 -- Eric A. Nilsson (1996), 'The Breakdown of the U.S. Postwar System of Labor Relations: An Econometric Study', Review of Radical Political Economics, 28 (1), 20-50 -- Michael Reich (2013), 'The Rising Strength of Management, High Unemployment, and Slow Growth: Revisiting Okun's Law', in Jeannette Wicks-Lim and Robert Pollin (eds), Capitalism on Trial: Explorations in the Tradition of Thomas E. Weisskopf, Chapter 11, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 165-86 -- Frank Strain and Hugh Grant (1991/92), 'The Social Structure of Accumulation in Canada, 1945-1988', Journal of Canadian Studies, 26 (4), Winter, 75-93 -- William I. Robinson (2001), 'Transnational Processes, Development Studies and Changing Social Hierarchies in the World System: A Central American Case Study', Third World Quarterly, 22 (4), 529-63 -- Stephen Gelb (1991), 'South Africa's Economic Crisis: An Overview', in South Africa's Economic Crisis, Chapter 1, South Africa: David Phillip Publishers, and London, UK: Zed Books, 1-32, 267-71 -- Nicoli Nattrass (1992), 'Profitability: The Soft Underbelly of South African Regulation/SSA Analysis', Review of Radical Political Economics, 24 (1), 31-51 -- James Heintz (2002), 'Political Conflict and the Social Structure of Accumulation: The Case of South African Apartheid', Review of Radical Political Economics, 34 (3), 319-26 -- Shilpa Ranganathan and Harland Prechel (2007), 'Political Capitalism, Neoliberalism, and Globalization in India: Redefining Foreign Property Rights and Facilitating Corporate Ownership, 1991-2005', in Harland Prechel (ed.), Politics and Neoliberalism: Structure, Process and Outcome. Research in Political Sociology, Volume 16, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: JAI Press/Elsevier Ltd, 201-43 -- Barbara Harriss-White (2004), 'India's Socially Regulated Economy', Indian Journal of Labour Economics, 47 (1), 49-68 -- Alessandra Mezzadri (2008), 'The Rise of Neo-liberal Globalisation and the "New Old" Social Regulation of Labour: A Case of Delhi Garment Sector', Indian Journal of Labour Economics, 51 (4), 603-18 -- Don Sherman Grant II and Michael Wallace (1994), 'The Political Economy of Manufacturing Growth and Decline across the American States, 1970-1985', Social Forces, 73 (1), September, 33-63 -- David Brady and Michael Wallace (2000), 'Spatialization, Foreign Direct Investment, and Labor Outcomes in the American States, 1978-1996', Social Forces, 79 (1), September, 67-105 -- Michael Wallace and David Brady (2001), 'The Next Long Swing: Spatialization, Technocratic Control, and the Restructuring of Work at the Turn of the Century', in Ivar Berg and Arne L. Kalleberg (eds), Sourcebook of Labor Markets: Evolving Structures and Processes, Chapter 5, New York, NY: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 101-33 -- Linda Lobao, Jamie Rulli and Lawrence A. Brown (1999), 'Macrolevel Theory and Local-Level Inequality: Industrial Structure, Institutional Arrangements, and the Political Economy of Redistribution, 1970 and 1990', Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 89 (4), 571-601 -- Michele I. Naples (1996), 'Labor Relations and the Social Structure of Accumulation: The Case of U.S. Coal Mining', in Cyrus Bina, Laurie Clements and Chuck Davis (eds), Beyond Survival: Wage Labor in the Late Twentieth Century, Chapter 5, Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 109-30, references
    Abstract: David M. Kotz (2010), 'The Final Conflict: What Can Cause a System-Threatening Crisis of Capitalism?', Science and Society, 74 (3), July, 362-79 -- Duncan K. Foley (2012), 'The Political Economy of Postcrisis Global Capitalism', South Atlantic Quarterly, 111 (2), Spring, 251-63 -- Fred Block (2011), 'Crisis and Renewal: The Outlines of a Twenty- First Century New Deal', Socio-Economic Review, 9 (1), January, 31-57 -- Phillip Anthony O'Hara (2000), 'A New Social Structure of Accumulation or the Emerging Global Crises of Capitalism?', in Marx, Veblen, and Contemporary Institutional Political Economy: Principles and Unstable Dynamics of Capitalism, Chapter 14, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 266-91
    Abstract: Kent A. Klitgaard and Lisi Krall (2012), 'Ecological Economics, Degrowth, and Institutional Change', Ecological Economics, 84, 247-53 -- F. Gregory Hayden (2011), 'Integrating the Social Structure of Accumulation and Social Accounting Matrix with the Social Fabric Matrix', American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 70 (5), November, 1208-33 -- Jonathan P. Goldstein (1999), 'The Existence, Endogeneity, and Synchronization of Long Waves: Structural Time Series Model Estimates', Review of Radical Political Economics, 31 (4), December, 61-101 -- Minqi Li, Feng Xiao and Andong Zhu (2007), 'Long Waves, Institutional Changes, and Historical Trends: A Study of the Long- Term Movement of the Profit Rate in the Capitalist World-Economy', Journal of World-Systems Research, XIII (1), 33-54 -- David M. Kotz (1990), 'A Comparative Analysis of the Theory of Regulation and the Social Structure of Accumulation Theory', Science and Society, 54 (1), Spring, 5-28 -- Robert Went (2002), 'Capitalism and Stages of Accumulation', in The Enigma of Globalization: A Journey to a New Stage of Capitalism, Chapter 5, London, UK and New York, NY: Routledge, 72-92, references -- Phillip Anthony O'Hara (1994), 'An Institutionalist Review of Long Wave Theories: Schumpeterian Innovation, Modes of Regulation, and Social Structures of Accumulation', Journal of Economic Issues, XXVIII (2), June, 489-500 -- Mark Setterfield (2011), 'Anticipations of the Crisis: On the Similarities between Post-Keynesian Economics and Regulation Theory', Revue de la régulation, 10, Autumn, http://regulation.revues.org, accessed on 12 June 2013, 2-17 -- Richard Westra (2010), 'Periodizing Capitalism and the World Historic Transmutability of Capital', in Political Economy and Globalization, Chapter 3, London, UK: Routledge, 43-92, 216-18, references -- Bruce Norton (1988), 'The Power Axis: Bowles, Gordon, and Weisskopf's Theory of Postwar U.S. Accumulation', Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture and Society, 1 (3), Fall, 6-43 -- Ismael Hossein-zadeh and Anthony Gabb (2000), 'Making Sense of the Current Expansion of the U.S. Economy: A Long Wave Approach and a Critique', Review of Radical Political Economics, 32 (3), September, 388-97 -- Stavros D. Mavroudeas (2012), 'The Social Structures of Accumulation Approach', in Ben Fine, Alfredo Saad-Filho and Marco Boffo (eds), The Elgar Companion to Marxist Economics, Chapter 50, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 316-20 -- Samuel Bowles, David M. Gordon and Thomas E. Weisskopf (1983), 'The Rise and Demise of the Postwar Corporate System', in Beyond the Waste Land: A Democratic Alternative to Economic Decline, Chapter 4, Garden City, NY: Anchor Press/Doubleday, 62-97, 424-8 -- Thomas E. Weisskopf, Samuel Bowles and David M. Gordon (1983), 'Hearts and Minds: A Social Model of U.S. Productivity Growth', Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2, 381-441 -- Samuel Bowles, David M. Gordon and Thomas E. Weisskopf (1986), 'Power and Profits: The Social Structure of Accumulation and the Profitability of the Postwar U.S. Economy', Review of Radical Political Economics, 18 (1&2), 132-67 -- Samuel Bowles, David M. Gordon and Thomas E. Weisskopf (1989), 'Business Ascendancy and Economic Impasse: A Structural Retrospective on Conservative Economics, 1979-87', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 3 (1), Winter, 107-34 -- David M. Gordon, Thomas E. Weisskopf and Samuel Bowles ([1994] 1998), 'Power, Profits and Investment: An Institutionalist Explanation of the Stagnation of U.S. Net Investment after the Mid- 1960s', in David M. Gordon, Economics and Social Justice: Essays on Power, Labor and Institutional Change, edited by Samuel Bowles and Thomas E. Weisskopf, Chapter 10, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 236-63 -- David M. Gordon, Thomas E. Weisskopf and Samuel Bowles (1983), 'Long Swings and the Nonreproductive Cycle', American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, 73 (2), May, 152-7 -- David M. Gordon (1994), 'Putting Heterodox Macro to the Test: Comparing Post-Keynesian, Marxian, and Social Structuralist Macroeconomic Models of the Post-War US Economy', in Mark Glick (ed.), Competition, Technology and Money: Classical and Post-Keynesian Perspectives, Chapter 8, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 143-85
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Aglietta, Michel (1979), A Theory of Capitalist Regulation: The American Experience, London: New Left Books -- Baran, Paul A. and Paul M. Sweezy (1966), Monopoly Capital: An Essay on the American Economic and Social Order, New York: Modern Reader -- Edwards, Richard (1979), Contested Terrain: The Transformation of the Workplace in the Twentieth Century, New York: Basic Books -- Kotz, David M., Terrence McDonough and Michael Reich (1994), Social Structures of Accumulation: The Political Economy of Growth and Crisis, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press -- McDonough, Terrence (1994), Social Structures of Accumulation: The Political Economy of Growth and Crisis, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press -- McDonough, Terrence, Michael Reich and David M. Kotz (2010), Contemporary Capitalism and its Crises: Social Structure of Accumulation Theory for the 21st Century, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press -- Mandel, Ernest (1978 [1975]), Late Capitalism, London: Verso -- Reich, Michael (1997), 'Social Structure of Accumulation Theory: Retrospect and Prospect', The Review of Radical Political Economics, 29 (3), 1-10 -- Terrence McDonough (2007), 'The Marxian Theory of Capitalist Stages', in Paul Zarembka (ed.), Transitions in Latin America and in Poland and Syria. Research in Political Economy, Volume 24, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier Ltd, 241-80 -- Michael Reich (1997), 'Social Structure of Accumulation Theory: Retrospect and Prospect', Review of Radical Political Economics, 29 (3), September, 1-10 -- Terrence McDonough (2008), 'Social Structures of Accumulation Theory: The State of the Art', Review of Radical Political Economics, 40 (2), Spring, 153-73 -- Michael Reich, David M. Gordon and Richard C. Edwards (1973), 'Dual Labor Markets: A Theory of Labor Market Segmentation', American Economic Review, 63 (2), May, 359-65 -- David M. Gordon (1978), 'Up and Down the Long Roller Coaster', in Crisis Reader Editorial Collective (ed.), U.S. Capitalism in Crisis, New York, NY: Union for Radical Political Economics, 22-35 -- David M. Gordon (1980), 'Stages of Accumulation and Long Economic Cycles', in Terence K. Hopkins and Immanuel Wallerstein (eds), Processes of the World-System, Chapter 1, Beverly Hills, CA: SAGE Publications, 9-45 -- David M. Gordon, Richard Edwards and Michael Reich (1982), 'Long Swings and Stages of Capitalism,' in Segmented Work, Divided Workers: The Historical Transformation of Labor in the United States, Chapter 2, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 18-47, 245-8, references -- David M. Kotz (1987), 'Long Waves and Social Structures of Accumulation: A Critique and Reinterpretation', Review of Radical Political Economics, 19 (4), Winter, 16-38 -- Terrence McDonough (1990), 'The Resolution of Crisis in American Economic History: Social Structures of Accumulation and Stages of Capitalism', in Paul Zarembka (ed.), Research in Political Economy, Volume 12, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, Inc., 129-83 -- Victor D. Lippit (2005), 'Social Structures of Accumulation: The Theoretical Issues', in Capitalism, Chapter 2, London, UK and New York, NY: Routledge, 23-43, 167-9, references -- David M. Kotz (2003), 'Neoliberalism and the Social Structure of Accumulation Theory of Long-Run Capital Accumulation', Review of Radical Political Economics, 35 (3), Summer, 263-70
    Abstract: Stephen Frenkel (1993), 'Australian Trade Unionism and the New Social Structure of Accumulation', in Stephen Frenkel (ed.), Organized Labor in the Asia-Pacific Region: A Comparative Study of Trade Unionism in Nine Countries, Chapter 9, Ithaca, NY: ILR Press, 249-81, 362-5, references -- David E. Barlow, Melissa Hickman Barlow and Theodore G. Chiricos (1993), 'Long Economic Cycles and the Criminal Justice System in the U.S.', Crime, Law and Social Change, 19 (2), March, 143-69 -- David E. Barlow and Melissa Hickman Barlow (1994/95), 'Federal Criminal Justice Legislation and the Post-World War II Social Structure of Accumulation in the United States', Crime, Law and Social Change, 22 (3), September, 239-67 -- Raymond J. Michalowski and Susan M. Carlson (2000), 'Crime, Punishment, and Social Structures of Accumulation: Toward a New and Much Needed Political-Economy of Justice', Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 16 (3), August, 272-92 -- Robert Cherry (1991), 'Race and Gender Aspects of Marxian Macromodels: The Case of the Social Structure of Accumulation School, 1948-68', Science and Society, 55 (1), Spring, 60-78 -- Phillip Anthony O'Hara (1995), 'Household Labor, the Family, and Macroeconomic Instability in the United States: 1940s-1990s', Review of Social Economy, LIII (1), Spring, 89-120 -- Michael D. Gillespie (2011), 'Capital Accumulation and Family Economic Deterioration: Historical Contingencies and the "Great Recession" of the United States', World Review of Political Economy, 2 (3), 406-40 -- Ellen Mutari and Deborah M. Figart (1997), 'Comparable Worth in a Restructuring Economy: Discourse and Counter-Discourse', in Ellen Mutari, Heather Boushey and William Fraher IV, Gender and Political Economy: Incorporating Diversity into Theory and Policy, Chapter 7, Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 115-30, references -- Francisco Valdes and Sumi Cho (2011), 'Critical Race Materialism: Theorizing Justice in the Wake of Global Neoliberalism', (43 Conn. L. Rev 1513) Connecticut Law Review, 43 (5), July, 1513-72 -- Martin H. Wolfson (2013), 'An Institutional Theory of Financial Crises', in Martin H. Wolfson and Gerald A. Epstein (eds), The Handbook of the Political Economy of Financial Crises, Chapter 9, New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 172-90 -- Harland Prechel (2003), 'Historical Contingency Theory, Policy Paradigm Shifts, and Corporate Malfeasance at the Turn of the 21st Century', in Betty A. Dobratz, Lisa K. Waldner and Timothy Buzzell (eds), Political Sociology for the 21st Century. Research in Political Sociology, Volume 12, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: JAI Press/Elsevier Science Ltd, 311-40 -- Mimi Abramovitz (2012), 'Theorising the Neoliberal Welfare State for Social Work', in Mel Grey, James Midgley and Stephen A. Webb (eds), The SAGE Handbook of Social Work, Chapter 2, London, UK: SAGE Publications, 33-50 -- Stephen McBride (2013), 'The New Constitutionalism: International and Private Rule in the New Global Order', in Gary Teeple and Stephen McBride (eds), Relations of Global Power: Neoliberal Order and Disorder, Chapter 2, Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press, 19-40 -- Harland Prechel and John B. Harms (2007), 'Politics and Neoliberalism: Theory and Ideology', in Harland Prechel (ed.), Politics and Neoliberalism: Structure, Process and Outcome. Research in Political Sociology, Volume 16, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: JAI Press/Elsevier Ltd, 3-17 -- Robert Went (2005), 'Globalization: Waiting - In Vain - for the New Long Boom', Science and Society, 69 (3), July, 367-95 -- John Asimakopoulos (2009), 'Globally Segmented Labor Markets: The Coming of the Greatest Boom and Bust, Without the Boom', Critical Sociology, 35 (2), March, 175-98 -- William K. Tabb (2012), 'Financialization and Social Structures of Accumulation', in The Restructuring of Capitalism in Our Time, Chapter 2, New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 25-59, references -- William I. Robinson (2012), 'Global Capitalism Theory and the Emergence of Transnational Elites', Critical Sociology, 38 (3), 349-63 -- Terrence McDonough and Tony Dundon (2010), 'Thatcherism Delayed? The Irish Crisis and the Paradox of Social Partnership', Industrial Relations Journal, 41 (6), 544-62
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781782546818
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (264 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Frenkel, Amnon Mapping national innovation ecosystems
    DDC: 338.064
    RVK:
    Keywords: Innovation ; Technischer Fortschritt ; Technologiepolitik ; Forschung ; Visualisierung ; Vergleich ; Theorie ; Israel ; Polen ; Deutschland ; Frankreich ; Spanien ; Ontario (Provinz) ; Shanghai ; Singapur ; Technological innovations ; Technological innovations Social aspects ; Electronic books ; Technischer Fortschritt ; Technische Innovation ; Technologiepolitik ; Internationaler Vergleich
    Abstract: 'Frenkel and Maital provide a ground-breaking deeply-delving study of innovation systems, offering guidance for decision-making practitioners that links theory with case-based learning opportunities.'--Michael Radnor, Chairman and co-founder, Global Advanced Technology Innovation Consortium (GATIC). 'A must read for national policy makers, this book highlights the role of innovation in overall economic wellbeing and the importance of a system-based approach to designing national innovation policies'--Brendan Cahill, Partner, BearingPoint. 'Every national innovation ecosystem is based on the country's history, culture, people and environment. This book is essential reading for policy-makers in any region or nation, especially for nations such as China, in the process of developing an innovation-based economy.'--Gu Peihua, Provost, Shantou University, China. Increasingly, researchers and policymakers alike recognize that innovations are generated by complex and dynamic national ecosystems that include government, industry, universities and schools. Because these systems differ by country and are strongly influenced by culture, effective policy and research strategies require a systems approach, in which policy consensus is built on a clear understanding of how each nation's innovation ecosystem functions. This book outlines a unique methodology for constructing visual maps of national innovation ecosystems. The authors provide completed maps for six countries (Israel, Poland, Germany, France, Spain and Singapore), and two regions (Greater Toronto and ZhiangJiang Technology Park in Shanghai), along with detailed breakdowns of the policy implications emerging from each. These in-depth examples and a clear methodological approach offer a comprehensive guide for constructing visual portrayals of innovation systems and demonstrate why this is a vital exercise. Scholars and students of innovation and management will find this book an invaluable resource, as will innovation policymakers across the world
    Abstract: 1. Towards national innovation systems -- 2. Method for mapping innovation ecosystems -- 3. The Israeli national innovation ecosystem -- 4. The Polish national innovation ecosystem -- 5. The German national innovation ecosystem -- 6. The national innovation ecosystem of France -- 7. The national innovation ecosystem of Spain -- 8. The health industry innovation ecosystem in the Province of Ontario, Canada -- 9. Shanghai, China [Zhangjiang Park] innovation ecosystem -- 10. Singapore's national innovation ecosystem -- Conclusion: A comparison of national & regional innovation ecosystems, with emphasis on markets & demand : like all, like some, like none -- Epilog: Systems mindset as foundations for policy
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781784713218
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (1 v) , cm
    Series Statement: Elgar research reviews in economics
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Path dependence and lock-in
    Keywords: Pfadabhängigkeit ; Technischer Fortschritt ; Wirtschaftswachstum ; Allokation ; Theorie ; Economics Decision making ; Economics ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Since their first emergence in the work of Paul David thirty years ago, the dual issues of Path Dependence and Lock-In have become critically important subjects in the fields of economics, sociology, and business strategy. Theoretical and public policy debates on these issues have arisen, addressing whether markets consistently choose the best products. This collection presents each side of the debate, bringing together key publications that initiated this literature with the later works that criticize or defend many of the early claims. Both the theoretical and empirical foundations of Path Dependence and Lock-In are examined along with the role of network effects. An original introduction by the editors is included to situate each article in its wider context
    Abstract: Paul Pierson (2000), 'Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics', American Political Science Review, 94 (2), June, 251-67 -- James Mahoney (2000), 'Path Dependence in Historical Sociology', Theory and Society, 29 (4), August, 507-48 -- Mark J. Roe (1996), 'Chaos and Evolution in Law and Economics', Harvard Law Review, 109 (3), January, 641-68
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Beeching, Wilfred (1974), A Century of the Typewriter, New York: St. Martin's Press -- Katz, Michael L. and Carl Shapiro (1985), "Network Externalities, Competition and Compatibility", American Economic Review, 75(3), June, 424-40 -- Veblen, Thorstein (1915), Imperial Germany and the Industrial Revolution, London: The Macmillan Company -- Paul A. David (1985), 'Clio and the Economics of QWERTY', American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, 75 (2), May, 332-7 -- W. Brian Arthur (1989), 'Competing Technologies, Increasing Returns, and Lock-In by Historical Events', Economic Journal, 99, March, 116-31 -- W. Brian Arthur (1990), 'Positive Feedbacks in the Economy', Scientific American, 262 (2), February, 92-5, 98-9 -- S.J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis (1990), 'The Fable of the Keys', Journal of Law and Economics, XXXIII (1), April, 1-25 -- S.J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis (1995), 'Path Dependence, Lock-In, and History', Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 11 (1), April, 205-26 -- Michael L. Katz and Carl Shapiro (1986), 'Technology Adoption in the Presence of Network Externalities', Journal of Political Economy, 94 (4), August, 822-41 -- Joseph Farrell and Garth Saloner (1985), 'Standardization, Compatibility, and Innovation', Rand Journal of Economics, 16 (1), Spring, 70-83 -- S.J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis (1995), 'Are Network Externalities a New Source of Market Failure?', Research in Law and Economics, 17, 1-22 -- Va Nee L. Van Vleck (1997), 'Delivering Coal by Road and Rail in Britain: The Efficiency of the "Silly Little Bobtailed" Coal Wagons', Journal of Economic History, 57 (1), March,139-60 -- Peter Scott (1999), 'The Efficiency of Britain's "Silly Little Bobtailed" Coal Wagons: A Comment on Van Vleck', Journal of Economic History, 59 (4), December, 1072-80 -- Va Nee L. Van Vleck (1999), 'In Defense (Again) of "Silly Little Bobtailed" Coal Wagons: Reply to Peter Scott', Journal of Economic History, 59 (4), December,1081-4 -- Douglas J. Puffert (2000), 'The Standardization of Track Gauge on North American Railways, 1830-1890', Journal of Economic History, 60 (4), December, 933-60 -- Larry E. Ribstein and Bruce H. Kobayashi (2001), 'Choice of Form and Network Externalities', William and Mary Law Review, 43 (1), 79-140 -- Gary D. Libecap (2009), 'Second-degree Path Dependence: Information Costs, Political Objectives, and Inappropriate Small-farm Settlement of the North American Great Plains', in Lars Magnusson and Jan Ottosson (eds), Evolution of Path Dependence, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 43-69 -- Memorandum of Amici Curiae in Opposition to Proposed Final Judgment (1995), United States of America v. Microsoft Corporation, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 94-1564, 1-34, amended -- Stan Liebowitz and Stephen Margolis (1995), 'Don't Handcuff Technology', Upside Magazine, September, 64-66, 68-70, 72-3
    Abstract: Stan J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis (1999), 'Using Software Markets to Test These Theories', in Winners, Losers and Microsoft: Competition and Antitrust in High Technology, Chapter 7, Oakland, CA, USA: Independent Institute, 135-61, references -- Stan J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis (1999), 'Major Markets - Spreadsheets and Word Processors', in Winners, Losers and Microsoft: Competition and Antitrust in High Technology, Chapter 8, Oakland, CA, USA: Independent Institute, 163-200, references -- Gerard J. Tellis, Eden Yin and Rakesh Niraj (2009), 'Does Quality Win? Network Effects Versus Quality in High-Tech Markets', Journal of Marketing Research, XLVI (2), April, 135-49 -- William H. Page (2010), 'Microsoft and the Limits of Antitrust', Journal of Competition Law and Economics, 6 (1), March, 33-50 -- Paul A. David (2001), 'Path Dependence, its Critics and the Quest for "Historical Economics"', in P. Garrouste and S. Ioannides (eds), Evolution and Path Dependence in Economic Ideas: Past and Present, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 15-40 -- Paul A. David (2007), 'Path Dependence: A Foundational Concept for Historical Social Science', Cliometrica, 1 (2), July, 91-114 -- Peter Lewin (2001), 'The Market Process and the Economics of QWERTY: Two Views', Review of Austrian Economics, 14 (1), March, 65-96 -- Stan J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis (2013), 'The Troubled Path of the Lock-In Movement', Journal of Competition Law and Economics, 9 (1), March, 125-52 -- Neil M. Kay (2013), 'Rerun the Tape of History and QWERTY Always Wins', Research Policy, 42 (6-7), July-August, 1175-85 -- W. Brian Arthur (2013), 'Comment on Neil Kay's Paper - "Rerun the Tape of History and QWERTY Always Wins"', Research Policy, 42 (6-7), July-August, 1186-7 -- Stephen E. Margolis (2013), 'A Tip of the Hat to Kay and QWERTY', Research Policy, 42 (6-7), July-August, 1188-90 -- Jean-Philippe Vergne (2013), 'QWERTY is Dead; Long Live Path Dependence', Research Policy, 42 (6-7), July-August, 1191-4 -- Neil M. Kay (2013), 'Rerun the Tape of History and QWERTY Always Wins: Response to Arthur, Margolis, and Vergne', Research Policy, 42 (6-7), July-August, 1195-6 -- Scott E. Page (2006), 'Path Dependence', Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 1, January, 87-115 -- Tanjim Hossain and John Morgan (2009), 'The Quest for QWERTY', American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, 99 (2), May, 435-40 -- Tanjim Hossain, Dylan Minor and John Morgan (2011), 'Competing Matchmakers: An Experimental Analysis', Management Science, 57 (11), November, 1913-25 -- Gordon Tullock (1975), 'The Transitional Gains Trap', Bell Journal of Economics, 6 (2), Autumn, 671-8 -- Stephen Coate and Stephen Morris (1999), 'Policy Persistence', American Economic Review, 89 (5), December, 1327-36 -- Robin Cowan (1990), 'Nuclear Power Reactors: A Study in Technological Lock-in', Journal of Economic History, L (3), September, 541-67
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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