At the HES Meeting just ended in Tacoma, the following awards for Distinguished Fellows of
the History of Economics Society were presented:
Peter Groenewegen
Peter Groenewegen, Emeritus Professor at the University of Sydney,
has published more than fifty journal articles since 1967, and more
than sixty chapters in books from 1977. His books range from his
edited translations of Turgot in 1977, to an Australian public
finance textbook in three editions in 1979, to a 1990 history of
Australian economics with Bruce McFarlane. And of course we have his
splendid and definitive 1995 biography of Alfred Marshall, a work
that honors both Marshall and the Marshallian Cambridge tradition.
His colleagues and students understand and appreciate his importance
to the history of economics community in Australia. He has been
mentor, facilitator, and cheerleader for the history of economics for
many years, and has embodied the best characteristics of serious
scholarship in our discipline.
Groenewegen's broad intellectual interests extend to his work in
other subdisciplines, as he contributed four tax monographs from 1976
to 1985, and edited or co-edited a further ten books between 1983 and
2001. From 1982 to 2000 he also edited (some of these cases involving
also translation) nine numbers in his Reprints of Economic Classics
series of important and neglected writings from the history of
economics, all with scholarly introductions and extensive editorial
notes. Finally, there are a number of contributions by Groenewegen to
reference works, of which the most significant are his twenty-six
entries in The New Palgrave. In 2002 he published his own three
volume collection of his essays in the history of economics.
Peter Groenewegen has made extensive contributions to institutional
organizations of various scholarly communities quite apart from his
work in the history of economics. He served as editor of Economic
Papers and as President of the History of Economic Thought Society of
Australia from 1981 to 1989. Groenewegen was elected a Fellow of the
Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in 1983, and has been
honoured internationally as a foreign or corresponding member of
Dutch, Italian and French academic societies.
It is with great pleasure that we name Peter Groenewegen a
Distinguished Fellow of the History of Economics Society.
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Takashi Negishi
Takashi Negishi, Professor Emeritus of the University of Tokyo, has
played a vital role in bridging the modern divide between economists
and historians of economics. He has created a path for non-historians
of economics, especially economic theorists, to enter a study of the
history of economics, particularly on the topics of classical
economics, Marxian economics, neoclassical economics and Keynesian
economics.
Takashi Negishi has enhanced the status of the history of economics
in the international community of economists. For example, he managed
to organize the very first session in the World Congress of the
International Economic Association (IEA) in Moscow in 1993, when he
was a member of its Executive Committee. Since then every IEA World
Congress has had a couple of sessions on the history of economics and
has thus provided an opportunity not only for internationally-active
scholars but also for local scholars and students to communicate and
exchange their ideas.
In the early 1980s, Professor Negishi began to publish articles and
books on the results of his serious study of the history of economic
theory. The first of his books to reach a wide public audience was
written in Japanese, but after 1985 he published more than forty
outstanding articles, and several books including his 1985 Economic
Theories in a Non-Walrasian Tradition, his 1989 History of Economic
Theory, and his 2001 Developments of International Trade Theory. He
became a member of the Japanese Society of the History of Economic
Thought, which has both the longest history and the largest number of
members in the world, and served as its President in 1997-99. He also
served as the President of the Econometric Society in 1993 and
delivered a Presidential address entitled "Great economists
misinterpreted", in which he spoke to an audience of active
econometricians about Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and Alfred Marshall
and emphasized the importance of an accurate knowledge of the history
of economics in the study of economic theory.
His study of the history of economics has encouraged his colleagues,
students and friends, as well as a much larger community, to see that
a wide and liberal historical study of economics can enrich the
discipline of economics.
We are delighted to name Takashi Negishi a Distinguished Fellow of
the History of Economics Society.
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A list of Distinguished Fellows of the HES is available at
http://eh.net/HE/HisEcSoc/fellows.shtml
E. Roy Weintraub
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