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Subject:
From:
[log in to unmask] (Kevin D. Hoover)
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:19:21 2006
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----------------- HES POSTING ----------------- 
 
UPDATED ANNOUNCEMENT WITH DATES, TIMES, AND LOCATIONS 
 
The History of Economics Society will sponsor four sessions at the Allied Social Sciences
Association meetings in Atlanta, Georgia  4 - 6 January 2002.
 
Session 1:  Debating Analytical and Political Egalitarianism 
Friday 4 January 2002, 8:00-10:00 AM in the Hilton (State Room) 
 
Organizers and Chairs: David Levy, George Mason University; Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace
College
 
Papers: 
 
Eric Schliesser, University of Chicago  “Equality & Sacred Property Rights in Smith, Hume,
and Rousseau.”
 
Samuel Hollander, Ben Gurion University  “Marx and Engels on Distribution and the Equality
Issue:  Capitalism and Communism.”
 
David M. Levy, George Mason University, and Sandra J. Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College
“Visual Representations of Abstract Economic Man: The British anti-slave Coalition,
Victorian Racial Anthropologists and Punch,”
 
 
Session 2:  Non-Economic Objectives as a Study in the History of Economic 
Thought 
Friday 4 January 2002, 10:15 AM-12:15 PM in the Hilton (State Room) 
 
Organizer: Bruce Elmslie, University of New Hampshire 
Chair:  Douglas Irwin, Dartmouth College  
Papers: 
 
Bruce Elmslie, University of New Hampshire, “Adam Smith as a Trade Policy Analyst: How
Well Did He Understand Non-Economic Objectives?”
 
Andreas Maneschi, Vanderbilt University, “Noneconomic Objectives in the History of
Economic Thought”
 
Joseph Persky, University of Illinois, Chicago, “When Did Equality Become a Non-Economic
Objective?”
 
Discussants:  Douglas Irwin, Dartmouth College; Norman Sedgley, Loyola College; Ingrid
Rima, Temple University
 
 
Session 4:  Keynes and General Equilibrium Theory 
Friday 4 January 2002, 2:30-4:30 PM in the Hilton (State Room) 
 
Organizer: Ezra Davar, Ben Gurion University 
Chair: James C.W. Ahiakpor, California State University, Hayward  
 
Papers: 
 
Axel Leijonhufvud, University of Trento, “Marshallian Microfoundations.” 
 
Ezra Davar, Ben Gurion University, “Underemployment: Voluntary and Involuntary.” 
 
Peter Howitt, Brown University, “The Micro Foundations of the Multiplier Process.” 
 
Robert Dimand, Brock University, “Keynes, IS-LM, and The Marshallian Tradition” 
 
 
Session 4:  The Makings of “Modern” Economics During the Cold War 
Saturday 5 January 2002, 2:30-4:30 PM in the Hilton (DeKalb Room) 
 
Organizer:  Mary S. Morgan, University of Amsterdam and London School of 
Economics 
Chair: Kevin D. Hoover, University of California, Davis  
 
  Papers: 
 
E. Roy Weintraub, Duke University, “How Economics Became a Mathematical Science.” 
 
Mary S. Morgan, University of Amsterdam and London School of Economics, “Simulations and
War Games: The Birth of a New Technology in Economics,”
 
Sonja Amadae, London School of Economics, “The Self-Interested Rational Actor as
Consummate Cold-War Warrior: The Development of the Neo-Liberal Self.”
 
Judy L. Klein, Mary Baldwin College, "Optimization and Recursive Residuals in the Space
Age: Sputnik and the Kalman Filter"
 
Kevin D. Hoover                  
 
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