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| | What is Marxism? |
 | | The new workers state would extend democracy from the political to the economic sphere with the nationalisation of the major monopolies. |  | | The emergence of the nation state together with the centralised monarchy ushered in a great economic advance. |  | | Each new re-organisation of society--be it slavery, feudalism or capitalism--has ushered in an enormous development of the productive forces which in turn gave men and women greater powers over nature. |
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http://www.newyouth.com/archives/theory/what_is_marxism.asp
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| | Marxism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This was partly a reaction to the Methodenstreit when they attacked the Hegelian doctrines of the Historical School; Marxist authors have decried that the Austrian school as a "bourgeois" reaction to Marx. |  | | The Austrian School were the first liberal economists to systematically challenge the Marxist school. |  | | Although there are still many Marxist revolutionary social movements and political parties around the world, since the collapse of the Soviet Union and its satellite states, relatively few countries have governments which describe themselves as Marxist. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marxism
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| | HETERODOX JOURNALS |
 | | Studying economics at Roosevelt University goes beyond the conventional economics taught at most universities in the United States. |  | | Southern Oregon University, located in beautiful Ashland, is part of the Oregon University System. |  | | The Economics Department at California State University, San Bernardino has a longstanding commitment to a heterodox curriculum. |
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http://www.urpe.org/undergradhetprogs.html
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| | News & Events - The New School for Social Research |
 | | After inquiring about his chances for a tenured position at a university in the United States, it was made clear to Sweezy that tenure for a Marxist scholar was not very likely. |  | | Although Schumpeter recommended Sweezy for the position and strongly supported his candidacy, Dunlop was awarded the job. |  | | Born in New York on April 10, 1910, Paul Sweezy was the son of Everett B. Sweezy, a vice president of First National Bank of New York. |
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http://www.newschool.edu/gf/news/03-04/articles/040329_sweezy.htm
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| | Economics 249: Marxist and Post-Marxist Economics |
 | | Finally, we will look at contemporary Marxist and radical political economists' visions of socialist transformation in the United States. |  | | Rhonda Williams, "A Reconsideration of Racial Earnings Inequality." Review of Radical Political Economics 19(2):1-15 (1987). |  | | This class will be run as a seminar, and class participation is very important. |
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http://www.wellesley.edu/Economics/matthaei/249_syllabus.html
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| | Karl Marx: Economist or Revolutionary? |
 | | His books and his magazine Monthly Review educated the generation of Marxist economists who grew up in the 1960s and are today teaching in universities, schools, and shop-floors across the United States. |  | | For almost thirty years, from the 1940s to the early 1960s, Paul Sweezy was, with Paul Baran, the best known Marxist in the United States. |  | | This is one reason their politics are social democratic rather than revolutionary. |
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http://www.eco.utexas.edu/facstaff/Cleaver/MarxEcoorRev.html
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| | Marxist Economics |
 | | For Marx economic laws were historically specific, in contrast to the classicals search for universal laws. |  | | Marxist economics is a school of thought in economics which has developed from the writings of Karl Marx (1818-1883). |  | | This approach differed fundamentally from the neoclassical economics which is dominant today. |
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http://carecon.org.uk/Users/paul/MARXIST.htm
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| | Marxist |
 | | Thus, in a socialist society, all private property will gradually be abolished and man no longer will oppress his fellow man in an effort to protect his private property. |  | | This title can be purchased through the CACC at (719) 685-9043, or through Amazon.com. |  | | This chapter will focus on the economic aspects of Marxism. |
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http://www.schwarzreport.org/Essays/M-L_Summaries/economics.htm
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| | Mandel's Economics by Paul Mattick 1969 |
 | | While pointing out that state interventions are necessary to ensure the profitability of the monopolies, he asserts, at the same time, that ‘trusts no longer suffer from a shortage of capital but rather from an excess of it,’ |  | | This experience must have penetrated into the unconsciousness of individuals, there to encounter the echoes from the primitive-communist past which have never been completely buried by the effects of ‘7,000 years of exploitation of man by man.’ |  | | In dealing with the mixed economy, Mandel forgets his Marxist learning altogether, and his exposition becomes self-contradictory. |
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http://www.marxists.org/archive/mattick-paul/1969/mandel.htm
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| | Economics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Both "economy" and "economics" are derived from the Greek oikos- for "house" or "settlement", and nomos for "laws" or "norms". |  | | Economics For The Citizen - By Walter Williams |  | | The term economics was coined around 1870 and popularized by influential "neoclassical" economists such as Alfred Marshall (Welfare definition), as a substitute for the earlier term political economy, which referred to "the economy of polities" – competing states. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics
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| | UICIFD///E-Book///Part One:III |
 | | It is not coincidental that, during this same period, the governments of most of the industrialized nations were governed by conservative political parties. |  | | Neo-Marxist economists accepted Marxist philosophy in principle but argued that it had to be modified if it was to be applicable to developing countries. |  | | Second, structuralist economists warned that, given the United States role as the worlds new industrial leader, the demand for raw materials was going to diminish because the United States was rich in natural resources. |
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http://www.uiowa.edu/ifdebook/ebook/contents/part1-III.shtml
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| | HES: EDITORIAL -- Whig H of E is Dead -- Now What? |
 | | Marx was wholly Whiggish in his (very extensive) writings on the history of economics. |  | | He constructed a story with himself at the apex and judged writers by their contribution to the line of thought that led up to his own writings. |  | | It is, however, surely true that Marxists are sustained by a belief in the inevitability of future socialism, however vague that belief may be. |
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http://www.eh.net/pipermail/hes/1996-December/000727.html
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| | Economics - Simple English Wikipedia |
 | | The two main branches of economics are microeconomics and macroeconomics. |  | | Connecting the two branches has been important and the general idea since the early 1980s is that good macroeconomic theory is based on a solid microeconomic foundation, meaning one can explain macroeconomic events in terms of microeconomics for individuals. |  | | Microeconomics focuses on the behavior(s) what are called individual actors (an individual, a household, a business or even groups of those) with the focus being to understand decision-making given the issue of scarcity and how these decisions affect things. |
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http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics
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| | Marxism Society, Directory |
 | | Das Kapital Quotes, biographies, movements and major texts from the Marxist movement. |  | | How to Make Communism Work This site shows how Marxist doctrine and a slow gradual change to communism can ensure its success. |  | | Marxist Criticism An academic summary of current Marxist criticism covering George Lukacs, Antonio Gramsci, Louis Althuser, and other major critics and thinkers in this school. |
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http://www.morrisarearedcross.org/bWFfMzE3MDgy.aspx
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| | Tony Brewer's home page |
 | | I am on the editorial advisory board of History of Political Economy, History of Economic Ideas, and the Journal of the History of Economic Thought, and have held visiting posts at Duke University (North Carolina) and at Chuo University (Tokyo). |  | | Assessments of Alfred Marshall's place in the history of economic thought. |  | | Department of Economics, University of Bristol, 8 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TN, England. |
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http://www.ecn.bris.ac.uk/www/ecab/aab.htm
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| | About So-Called Islamic Marxism |
 | | Also see his essay "Machines and Man" in his book ESSAYS IN ECONOMICS). |  | | During the period when those works were written, most of the social, political, economic, and to some extent, philosophical writings, were influenced by the Marxist theory. |  | | But Wassily Leontief himself has a high respect for the historical achievements of the Marxian economic theory (see his essay "The Decline and Rise of Soviet Economic Science" in his book ESSAYS IN ECONOMICS). |
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http://www.ghandchi.com/110-IslamicMarxism.htm
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| | The Political Economy Page |
 | | This is a site devoted to Marxist political economy. |  | | It demonstrates quite convincingly, and with a lot of statistical support, that the long U.S. boom of the 1990s is to be explained largely by the tremendous increase in working-class debt over that decade, and not by the repeal of the laws of capitalism or through some "New Economy" magic. |  | | An Introductory Explanation of Capitalist Economic Crises, by Scott H. (2004) — This pamphlet discusses both the underlying and surface contradictions involved in capitalist crises. |
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http://members.aol.com/PolitEcon
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| | Teaching and Courses |
 | | Study and critique of contemporary radical economic movements, including the environmental movement; the movements for socially responsible consumption, investment, business, and work; and the anti-globalization or globalization from below movement. |  | | Focus on the development of mainstream, neoclassical theory out of classical political economy, as well as study of various heterodox schools, including Marxist, institutionalist, and feminist economics. |  | | Analysis of the topics of scarcity, price determination, income distribution, monopoly, unemployment, economic freedom and democracy, sexual and racial inequality, the environment, and economic methodology Student debates on selected issues. |
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http://www.wellesley.edu/Economics/matthaei/courses.html
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| | Chapter 30 |
 | | This appendix explores the Marxist alternative to neoclassical economics. |  | | While a knowledge of "bourgeois economics" is not strictly necessary to undertake this appendix, concepts from chapter 1, chapter 2, chapter 5, chapter 7, chapter 17, and chapter 18 may be useful. |
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http://william-king.www.drexel.edu/top/prin/txt/marx/ApxToC.html
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| | Marxist Economics |
 | | Marxist, neoclassical, and Keynesian economics all have their roots in the "Classical Political Economy" of the early 19th century, but since the later nineteenth century they have developed in different ways. |  | | Thus, Marxist economics has as strong (or weak) a case as ever where its analysis of capitalism is concerned. |  | | Since governments based on Marxist ideology have mostly either collapsed or moved away from the distinctive "Soviet-type" economics system toward more capitalist economic systems, it may seem that Marxist ideas are discredited. |
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http://william-king.www.drexel.edu/top/prin/txt/marx/marx0.html
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| | JEI Volume 32, December 1998 |
 | | Institutional Economics, Feminism, and Overdetermination, Waller, William, 835-844. |  | | This paper discusses the development of what might be called an “institutionalist” approach to Marxian theory by tracing the development of the decentered Marxism from Louis Althusser, to Anthony Cutler, Barry Hindess, Paul Hirst and Athar Hussain, to the more recent work of Stephen Resnick and Richard Wolff. |  | | These discussions and debates have had to the developments in institutional economics that bring it close to the scholarship of overdeterminist Marxists. |
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http://www.orgs.bucknell.edu/afee/jei/jei9912.htm
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| | Eco 357k Introduction to Marxist Economics |
 | | Thus, students demanded fewer requirements and more time for black studies, women's studies, radical economics, insurgent sociology, Marxist history, etc. Indeed the creation of this course on Marx was a victory achieved by students here at UT after three years of struggle for more space to study what they wanted. |  | | One possible Marxist response: there's no doubt that the reduction of the length of the working day has been accompanied by a general growth and development of the capitalist economy and standards of living (leaving aside the question of the growth of poisons, pollution and quality of consumer goods). |  | | A reasonable response to the Marxist complain of exploitation as extraction of surplus labor is to point out that even if there were no capitalists workers whose population was growing or whose needs were growing would still need to produce a surplus in order to be able to expand production in the future. |
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http://www.eco.utexas.edu/facstaff/Cleaver/357koldtest2.html
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| | ::: Welcome to Robinson ::: |
 | | Post-Keynesian and Marxist economics: twins or distant cousins? |  | | * The theoretical portion of this paper was presented at the Progressive Economics Forum session of the annual meeting of the Canadian Economics Association, May-June 2001, McGill University, Montreal. |  | | Department of Economics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada |
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http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~robinson/english/wp/wp_11.htm
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| | short introduction to marxist economics |
 | | While it’s beyond the scope of this newspaper article to attempt to present all of Marx’s economic theory there, we can point the reader in the right direction by providing a brief introduction of a few basic ideas. |  | | Karl Marx was the first to come up with a fully consistent economic explanation of how the capitalist economic system works — and why it doesn’t work. |  | | An ever-larger proportion of the working class is being driven below the poverty level, with growing numbers of homeless people sleeping in the streets of the nation’s big cities. |
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http://www.geocities.com/youth4sa/economics.html
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| | SOSIG: Marxist Economics |
 | | You are here : Home > Economics Home > Economics > Economic Systems and Theories > Marxist Economics |  | | Economics Home > Economics > Economic Systems and Theories > Marxist Economics"--> |
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http://www.sosig.ac.uk/roads/subject-listing/UK-cat/marxec.html
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| | Marxist Economics 101 (A Rough Summary) |
 | | There's no point in producing more; so they lay off workers. |  | | 14) The pure competitive market model says that economic agents will be egoists. |  | | But this further decreases total wages and thus demand for consumer goods, and a worse economic crisis than before is the result. |
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http://www.wku.edu/~jan.garrett/303/marxecon.htm
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| | Economics and Business > Economics |
 | | Category Home / Economics and Business / Economics |
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http://www.questia.com/library/economics-and-business/economics/schools-of-e...
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