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Date: | Mon, 16 May 2011 09:50:28 -0400 |
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Robert,
Yes, that's right - it is my understanding that a paraphrasing or
summary is permissible in such circumstances.
Bruce
On 5/13/2011 10:54 PM, Robert Leeson wrote:
> In response to off-list requests: I can't circulate this material in its current form until I have archival citation permission from the relevant book publisher (permission requested several months ago).
>
> I understand that if a scholar is denied permission to quote public domain archival material, a summary of letters etc can be used instead (along with a discussion about the attempted suppression). Does anyone have information about this?
>
> Robert Leeson
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Robert Leeson"<[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Sent: Friday, 13 May, 2011 11:33:10 AM
> Subject: [SHOE] Economists and the Cold War
>
> There is a dispassionate account of the corruption and manipulation of 'information' during the Cold War in a forthcoming volume in my Archival Insights into the Evolution of Economics series. The left wing Guardian newspaper plus a number of economists (including Terence Hutchison and Friedrich Hayek) were "taken for a ride" by someone who devoted his 'professional' life to 'faction' or less politely, fraud, and Cold War fraud in particular.
>
> Robert Leeson
--
Bruce Caldwell
Research Professor of Economics
Director, Center for the History of Political Economy
"To discover a reference has often taken hours of labour, to fail to discover one has often taken days." Edwin Cannan, on editing Smith's Wealth of Nations
Address:
Department of Economics
Duke University
Box 90097 / 213 Social Sciences
Durham, N.C. 27708
Office: Room 07G
Phone: 919-660-6896
Fax: 919-681-7984
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