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Date: | Tue, 12 Jan 2010 17:57:57 -0500 |
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The 1970s and 1980s brought a significant
proliferation in the publication of economics
textbooks in the United States. I have assembled
an enormous bibliography of economics texts
published during this period, thanks to the
extensive holdings of the Library of Congress,
but I am trying to get a sense for which of these
textbooks were the most popular/most widely
adopted during this period. (Why? I am tracing
the diffusion of the Coase theorem in the
textbook literature, and I want to get at not
only how the various books treatedor did not
treatthe theorem, but how it was treated in the
most popular books and thus was presented, in
writing at least, to the largest body of students.)
I am particularly interested in:
Principles of Economics texts (besides Samuelson’s Economics)
Intermediate Microeconomics texts
Public Finance texts (Musgrave & Musgrave, but what else?)
If anyone has any knowledge of sales data, I
would love to hear where such data can be found,
but I am also interested in hearing impressions
of those who have a general sense for what books
were most widely used in the 70s and 80s.
Thanks,
Steve Medema
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