Welfare Theory, Public Action, and Ethical Values
Herausgeber: Backhouse, Roger E; Nishizawa, Tamotsu; Baujard, Antoinette
Welfare Theory, Public Action, and Ethical Values
Herausgeber: Backhouse, Roger E; Nishizawa, Tamotsu; Baujard, Antoinette
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9781108841450
- ISBN-10: 1108841457
- Artikelnr.: 60169591
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction: revisiting the history of welfare economics Roger E.
Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard and Tamotsu Nishizawa; Part I. Plurality of
Welfare in the Making of Welfare Economics: 1. Ruskin's romantic triangle:
neither wealth nor beauty but life Yuichi Shionoya; 2. Radicalism versus
Ruskin: quality and quantity in Hobson's welfare economics Peter Cain; 3.
Alfred Marshall on progress and human wellbeing Tamotsu Nishizawa; 4.
Pigou's welfare economics revisited: a non-welfarist and non-utilitarian
interpretation Satoshi Yamazaki; 5. To which kind of welfare did Léon
Walras refer? The theorems and the state Richard Arena; 6. Value judgement
within Pareto's economic and sociological approaches to welfare Rogerio
Arthmar and Michael McClure; Part II. Developing Modern Welfare Economics:
7. John Hicks's farewell to economic welfarism: how deeply rooted and far
reaching is his Non-Welfarist Manifesto? Kotaro Suzumura; 8. Individualism
and ethics: Paul Samuelson's welfare economics Roger E. Backhouse; 9. Non
welfarism in the early debates over the Coase theorem: the case of
environmental economics Steven Medema; 10. Richard Musgrave and the idea of
community Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay; 11. Non-welfaristic features of
Kenneth Arrow's ideas of justice Nao Saito; 12. Beyond welfarism: the
potential and limitations of the capability approach Constanze Binder; 13.
The influence of Sen's applied economics on his non-welfarist approach to
justice: agency at the core of public action for removing injustices Muriel
Gilardone; Conclusion Roger E. Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard, and Tamotsu
Nishizawa.
Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard and Tamotsu Nishizawa; Part I. Plurality of
Welfare in the Making of Welfare Economics: 1. Ruskin's romantic triangle:
neither wealth nor beauty but life Yuichi Shionoya; 2. Radicalism versus
Ruskin: quality and quantity in Hobson's welfare economics Peter Cain; 3.
Alfred Marshall on progress and human wellbeing Tamotsu Nishizawa; 4.
Pigou's welfare economics revisited: a non-welfarist and non-utilitarian
interpretation Satoshi Yamazaki; 5. To which kind of welfare did Léon
Walras refer? The theorems and the state Richard Arena; 6. Value judgement
within Pareto's economic and sociological approaches to welfare Rogerio
Arthmar and Michael McClure; Part II. Developing Modern Welfare Economics:
7. John Hicks's farewell to economic welfarism: how deeply rooted and far
reaching is his Non-Welfarist Manifesto? Kotaro Suzumura; 8. Individualism
and ethics: Paul Samuelson's welfare economics Roger E. Backhouse; 9. Non
welfarism in the early debates over the Coase theorem: the case of
environmental economics Steven Medema; 10. Richard Musgrave and the idea of
community Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay; 11. Non-welfaristic features of
Kenneth Arrow's ideas of justice Nao Saito; 12. Beyond welfarism: the
potential and limitations of the capability approach Constanze Binder; 13.
The influence of Sen's applied economics on his non-welfarist approach to
justice: agency at the core of public action for removing injustices Muriel
Gilardone; Conclusion Roger E. Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard, and Tamotsu
Nishizawa.
Introduction: revisiting the history of welfare economics Roger E.
Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard and Tamotsu Nishizawa; Part I. Plurality of
Welfare in the Making of Welfare Economics: 1. Ruskin's romantic triangle:
neither wealth nor beauty but life Yuichi Shionoya; 2. Radicalism versus
Ruskin: quality and quantity in Hobson's welfare economics Peter Cain; 3.
Alfred Marshall on progress and human wellbeing Tamotsu Nishizawa; 4.
Pigou's welfare economics revisited: a non-welfarist and non-utilitarian
interpretation Satoshi Yamazaki; 5. To which kind of welfare did Léon
Walras refer? The theorems and the state Richard Arena; 6. Value judgement
within Pareto's economic and sociological approaches to welfare Rogerio
Arthmar and Michael McClure; Part II. Developing Modern Welfare Economics:
7. John Hicks's farewell to economic welfarism: how deeply rooted and far
reaching is his Non-Welfarist Manifesto? Kotaro Suzumura; 8. Individualism
and ethics: Paul Samuelson's welfare economics Roger E. Backhouse; 9. Non
welfarism in the early debates over the Coase theorem: the case of
environmental economics Steven Medema; 10. Richard Musgrave and the idea of
community Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay; 11. Non-welfaristic features of
Kenneth Arrow's ideas of justice Nao Saito; 12. Beyond welfarism: the
potential and limitations of the capability approach Constanze Binder; 13.
The influence of Sen's applied economics on his non-welfarist approach to
justice: agency at the core of public action for removing injustices Muriel
Gilardone; Conclusion Roger E. Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard, and Tamotsu
Nishizawa.
Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard and Tamotsu Nishizawa; Part I. Plurality of
Welfare in the Making of Welfare Economics: 1. Ruskin's romantic triangle:
neither wealth nor beauty but life Yuichi Shionoya; 2. Radicalism versus
Ruskin: quality and quantity in Hobson's welfare economics Peter Cain; 3.
Alfred Marshall on progress and human wellbeing Tamotsu Nishizawa; 4.
Pigou's welfare economics revisited: a non-welfarist and non-utilitarian
interpretation Satoshi Yamazaki; 5. To which kind of welfare did Léon
Walras refer? The theorems and the state Richard Arena; 6. Value judgement
within Pareto's economic and sociological approaches to welfare Rogerio
Arthmar and Michael McClure; Part II. Developing Modern Welfare Economics:
7. John Hicks's farewell to economic welfarism: how deeply rooted and far
reaching is his Non-Welfarist Manifesto? Kotaro Suzumura; 8. Individualism
and ethics: Paul Samuelson's welfare economics Roger E. Backhouse; 9. Non
welfarism in the early debates over the Coase theorem: the case of
environmental economics Steven Medema; 10. Richard Musgrave and the idea of
community Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay; 11. Non-welfaristic features of
Kenneth Arrow's ideas of justice Nao Saito; 12. Beyond welfarism: the
potential and limitations of the capability approach Constanze Binder; 13.
The influence of Sen's applied economics on his non-welfarist approach to
justice: agency at the core of public action for removing injustices Muriel
Gilardone; Conclusion Roger E. Backhouse, Antoinette Baujard, and Tamotsu
Nishizawa.