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[NOTE: A number of papers in several of the following sessions may be of
interest to some on this list. Does anyone know if this program is
available on the web? -- RBE]
ASSOCIATION FOR INSTITUTIONALIST THOUGHT
WESTERN SOCIAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION
39TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE, ALBUQUERQUE NM
APRIL 23-26
TENTATIVE PROGRAM
6-8pm WSSA Welcoming Reception
THURSDAY APR 24
8-9 AM: WSSA section and association coordinators meeting
8-9:30 AM: ROUNDTABLE: TEACHING POLITICAL ECONOMY FOR THE NEW AGE
--D. Underwood: Bringing the Economy-Ecology Interface into
Economics
--J. Knoedler: Consumer Sovereignty and Corporate Repression of an
Assiduous People
--D. Champlin: The Operational Elements of Trust Networks and their
Place in Economics
--T. Amott: Economics and Human Difference: Beyond Homo Economicus
--P. King: The Economics of Sustainability: Does Community Make a
Difference
9:45-11:15 AM: PLENARY SESSION I: WORK AS AN INSTITUTION
--J.D. Wisman: Work and the Formation of Human Behavior
--H. Wolozin: Work as an Economic and Noneconomic Institution in
Today's Economy
--J. Tomoser: Structural Poverty and the Veblenian Instinct of
Workmanship
--R. Chapman and J. Gray: Institutionalist Perspectives on the
Current Job Market for College Grads
Chair: G. DeMartino
11:30-12:30: WSSA Plenary Session
12:30-1:15: AFIT Board of Director's meeting
1:15-2:45 PM: Concurrent Sessions:
A) RESOURCES, DEVELOPMENT AND REGULATION: INSTITUTIONAL AND
CULTURAL DIMENSIONS
--J. Paavola: Commons, Veblen and the Evolution of Water Pollution
Control Institutions in the US, 1850-1980
--A. Steenstra: Race, Culture, and Economics: Opportunities and
Limitations for American Indian Water Applications
--D. Vinje: Rural Economic Development: An Assessment of Economic
Linkages Between Native American Casinos and Neighboring Rural
Counties
--T. Gallaway: Light Pollution--Its Place in the Development of
Economic Thought
Chair: J. Swaney
B) CRIME, PUNISHMENT, AND EDUCATION
--J. Johnson and C. Johnson: Poverty, Equal Protection and the
Death Penalty
--R. Fowles and J. Watkins: Reducing Recidivism through Education:
An Institutionalist Approach to Reducing Crime
--M.R. Van Tassell and J.J. Hurst: Breaking Racial Lines: An
Analysis of Affirmative Action and School Choice
Chair:
3-4:30 PM: A REVIEW OF RON STANFIELD'S JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
--B. Dugger, J. Adams, B. McClintock, B. Brown, and D. Brown,
Reviewers
--J.R. Stanfield, Author
--R.J. Phillips, Chair
4:45-5:45 PM: WSSA Business Meeting
6-7 PM: AFIT RECEPTION (OPEN)
7-? AFIT Business Meeting and DINNER
--E. Miller, PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
FRIDAY APR 25
7-8 AM: WSSA Continental Breakfast
8-9:30 AM: Concurrent Sessions
A) INTERNATIONAL TRADE, DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR-EX MARKETS:
INSTITUTIONALIST AND POST KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVES
--J. Harvey: The Nature of Expectations and Decision Making in the
Foreign Exchange Market
--J. Deprez and H. Hieke: The Institutionalist Robustness of
Thrilwall's Law: Some Post Keynesian Observations
--Y. Elhan: Financial Liberalization and Development: The Case of
Turkey
--W.C. Schaniel and T. Perkins: Toward One Market? A Comparison and
Evaluation of the Differences Between the COMEX and LME Copper
Markets
Chair: B. McClintock
B) EFFICIENCY, SUSTAINABILITY, AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
--B. Hildred and D. Brown: Sufficiency vs. Efficiency in Theory of
the Leisure Class: A Veblenian Contribution for a Sustainable
Economy
--O. Nankivell: Thoughts on the Anatomy of Technological, Economic,
and Social Change
--A. Krause: Reconciling Institutional and Keynesian Theories of
Technological Change
--J. Gilbert: Technological Change and Effects on the Labor Market
Chair: P. Olsen
9:45-11:15 AM: PLENARY SESSION II: INSTITUTIONAL KEYNESIANISM?
--D. Hamilton: Keynesian Institutionalism or Institutional
Keynesianism?
--G. Atkinson and T. Oleson: An Institutionalist Perspective on the
General Theory
--J.P. Raines and C. Leathers: Institutional Characteristics of
Speculative Equity: the Views of Veblen and Keynes
P. Klein: Normative Macroeconomics: Conjoining Keynes and
Institutionalism
Chair: L.R. Wray
11:30-1 PM: HISTORY OF THOUGHT: CLARK, VEBLEN, KEYNES, PRAGMATISM
--L. Shute: J.M. Clark and Institutionalist Theory
--L. Van Sickle: The Pathologizing of Thorstein Veblen: He Ain't No
Lord Keynes But He Just Might be Redemptive
--S. Edgell: Veblen on Technology and Technocracy: Faulty Theory
and Flawed Socialism?
--K. Quinn: What are the Implications of the Neo-pragmatist Revival
for Institutional Economics?
Chair: M. Tool
1:15-2:45 PM: CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS
--P. Olsen and D. Champlin: Ending Corporate Welfare as We Know It
--D. Champlin and J. Knoedler: In Markets we Trust: Corporate
Restructuring and Government Complicity after the Golden Age
--J. Swaney: Closing the Cycle of Cost: Instrumental Uses of Risk
Assessment
--C. Lawson: Economics, Institutions, and the Medical Ethics
Consultant
Chair: J. Munkirs
3-4:30 PM: Concurrent Sessions
A) HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT, IMMIGRATION AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION
--J. Sturgeon: Intra-Organizational Forces Affecting Human Resource
Development
--B. Young and D. Bowles: Immigration in the 1990s: The Impact on
Heterogeneous Labor Markets
--J. Jumara and R. Wood: Competition as a Deterrent in the
Development of Human Resources
--G. Carter: Intra-Organizational Income Distribution & Human
Resource Policy
Chair: J. Peach
B) FREE MARKETS, SHOCKS, AND TRANSITIONAL ECONOMIES
--S. Shuklian: Economic Development and the Myth of Laissez Faire:
Germany and France in the Nineteenth Century
--J. Hall and E. Kigyossy-Schmidt: Re-Emergent Capitalism in
Central Europe: An Institutionalist Perspective
--R. LaJeunesse: An Alternative Approach to Transitional Economies
Chair: M. Sawyer
4:45-5:45 PM: WSSA Presidential Address
6:30-8:30 PM: WSSA President's Reception
SATURDAY APR 26
8-9:30 AM: PROPERTY, MARKETS, AND ECONOMIC THEORY
--K. Calandri: Cooperatives, Markets, and Economic Development
--J. Henry: Neoclassical Theory, the Nature of a Monetary Economy,
and Property Rights
--A. Mayhew: A Truly Evolutionary Theory of Human Society: Animals,
Nature, and Purpose
--C. Brown: Re-engineering and the "New Rentier"
Chair: B. Dugger
9:45-11:15 AM: RESEARCH PARADIGMS AND METHODOLOGY: Instrumentalism,
Keynesian, Institutionalist
--J. Webb: Why Instrumentalists Should Not Be Instrumentalists
--C.R. Waits: Economists and the Practice of Social Science
--W.C. Neale: Keynes's General Theory at Columbia University, 1947-
51: A Graduate Student's View [A Written Contribution to Oral
History]
--M. Toruno: Keynesians, Institutionalists, and Theories of the
State
Chair: P.D. Bush
11:30-1 PM: FINANCIAL MARKETS: GLOBALIZATION AND POLICY
IMPLICATIONS
--P. Arestis and M. Sawyer: The Tobin Financial Transactions Tax:
Its Potential and Feasibility
--B. Wiens-Tuers: The Economics of Contingent or Non-Standard Labor
--R. Pedace: Immigration, Migration, and US Labor Markets
--G. Choksy: Monetary Networks, Keynesian Multiplier Effects, and
Policy Implications
Chair: G. Dymski
1:15-2:45: POWER AND MARKET FORM: FIRMS, STAKEHOLDERS, AND UNIONS
--S. Dunn: A Post Keynesian Contribution to the Theory of the Firm
--E. Schutz: Market Imperfection and Social Power
--M. Haggerty and S. Welcomer: Institutional Economics as a Basis
for Stakeholder Theory
--G. DeMartino: "Demonstration" Drives, "Predatory" Drives: an
Enterprise Model of Union Organizing
Chair: D. Brown
3:00-4:30: Concurrent Sessions
A) CIVIL SOCIETY AS AN ECONOMIC INSTITUTION
--J. Molinas: The Impact of Inequality, Gender, External Assistance
and Social Capital on Local Collective Action
--T. Masterson: Culture of Reciprocity: Collective Action in the
Great League of the Iroquois
--J. Carpenter: Towards a Theory of Evolutionarily Stable Group
Strategies
--M. Torras: The Ecological Benefits of Collective Action: An
Institutionalist Perspective
Discussant: M. Ferreira
Chair: J. Molinas
B) PROBLEMS OF THE NEW ZEALAND ECONOMY (CROSS LISTED WITH NEW
ZEALAND STUDIES SECTION)
--B. McClintock: William Ball Sutch: A New Zealand Institutionalist
--B. Schaniel: Technology and the New Zealand Maori
Chair:
4:45-6:15: PLENARY SESSION III: FAMILY VALUES AND SOCIAL
PATHOLOGIES
--R.L. Brinkman and J.E. Brinkman: Family Values and American
Economic Decline
--G. Dymski: Economic Polarization and US Policy Activism
--C. Hushbeck: Buck-Passing and the Elderly Poor: Reforming Welfare
as a Lose-Lose Proposition for Individuals and State/Local
Governments
--W. Waller and L. Robertson: The Political Economy of Consumption
and Desire
Chair: P. Klein
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