33447381http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6ff4hqgrevised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-09-20machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-12T20:57:18machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-12T20:57:19humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-28machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonHicks, John, 1904-1989presumedHicks, John Richard, Sir, 1904-1989presumedHicks, John, 1904-presumedHicks, John Richard, Sir, 1904-presumedHicks, John RichardpresumedHicks, John R., 1904-1989presumedHicks, J. R. (John Richard), 1904-1989presumedHicks, JohnpresumedHicks, John Richard (1904-1989).presumedHicks, John R.presumedHicks, John (John Richard), 1904-1989presumedHicks, J. R., 1904-1989presumedHicks, John Richard, SirpresumedHicks, Sir, John Richard, 1904-1989presumedHicks, J. R. Sir 1904-1989presumedHiks, Dž. R.presumedHicks, J. R.presumedHei-kʻo-ssu, 1904-1989presumedHei-k'o-ssu 1904-1989presumedHei-ko-ssu, 1904-presumedヒックス, ジョンpresumedHicks, J. R., 1904-presumedHicks, John R. Sir 1904-1989presumedヒックス, J. R.presumedHicks, J. R. 1904-1989 (John Richard),presumedヒックス, J.presumedHicks, John Sirpresumed黒克斯presumedHicks, J. R. Sir 1904-presumedHicks, J. R. Sir, 1904- (John Richard),presumedHicks, J. R. Sir, 1904-1989 (John Richard),presumedХикс, Дж. Р 1904-1989presumed1904-04-081989-05-20EnglishBritonsBaumol, William J.Clower, Robert W.Davidson, Paul, 1930-Meade, James Edward, 1907-1995Meier, Gerald M.Hicks, John, 1904-1989Davidson, Paul, 1930-. Paul Davidson papers, 1961-2004 and undated.Davidson, Paul, 1930-Paul Davidson papers, 1961-2004 and undated.10,125 items (13.5 lin. ft.)The Paul Davidson Papers span the years 1961-2004 and document his professional career and interests, including post-Keynesian economics; international monetary payments and global employment policies; monetary theory; income distribution; and energy economics. The collection almost exclusively consists of correspondence files, with the exception of a few clippings and speeches folders. The most notable group of correspondents are his fellow post-Keynesians such as Victoria Chick, Alfred Eichner, John Kenneth Galbraith, Geoff Harcourt, Jan Kregel, Hyman Minsky, Basil Moore, Luigi Pasinetti, Joan Robinson, Anthony Thirlwall, and Sidney Weintraub. Other correspondents of note include Philip Arestis, Peter Bernstein, Robert Clower, Robert Eisner, Sir John Hicks, Allan H. Meltzer, Edward Nell, Don Patinkin, James Tobin, and Paul Samuelson. Other large amounts of correspondence and other materials relate to Davidson's editorial work with many major economics journals, including the Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, which he founded; these folders typically contain correspondence between Davidson, journal referees, and authors. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryBaumol, William J. Papers, ca. 1940-1995. (bulk 1950-1970 and 1975-1990)Baumol, William J.Papers, ca. 1940-1995. (bulk 1950-1970 and 1975-1990)56475 items (72.2 lin. ft.)The professional papers (40850 items, 46.51 linear feet, dated 1943-1995) of William Baumol are representative of his career as an academic economist and consultant to industry and government. The substance of the collections begins with his appointment to Princeton's Department of Economics in 1949 until his retirement in 1992, and covers nearly all of his research interests. Materials include correspondence with other economists concerning publications or works in progress; manuscript drafts and galleys; papers prepared for conferences and special lectures; research materials (including notes, materials produced by others, data and other statistical output); special project reports; teaching materials (lecture notes, exams, course syllabi); material relating to industry consulting work, legal testimony and some printed material. Correspondents and chief protagonists during Baumol's long career represent many famous names of 20th-century economists, including Don Patinkin, Frank Hahn, Friederich Hayek, and Sir John Hicks; and future Nobel prize winners G.S. Becker, Milton Friedman, and Paul Samuelson. Other topics include antitrust investigations with the Federal Communications Commission, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and the Interstate Commerce Commission; welfare economics; monetary policy; labor economics; industrial productivity; rates for electric, railroad, and telephone companies; finance of the performing arts and public education; and environmental policy. The addition (01-169) (11825 items, 19.20 linear feet, dated 1964-1995 and n.d.) contains professional papers including correspondence, reviews, consulting files, lecture notes, drafts of writings, grant files, and three black-and-white transparencies. Revisions of Baumol's writings on productivity and his books ECONOMICS: PRINCIPLES AND POLICY and PRODUCTIVITY AND AMERICAN LEADERSHIP: THE LONG VIEW are represented among the drafts. The addition (01-170) (2000 items, 5 linear feet, dated 1974-1990) holds files containing or regarding reviews, recommendations, proposals, engagements, and other correspondence. Subjects include the World Resources Institute, the Eastern Economic Association, and the manuscript of "On Finances of the Performing Arts during Stagflation." There are also 114 floppy disks of graphs and texts for writings by Baumol as well as one reel-to-reel audiotape. The addition (02-225) (1800 items, 1.5 linear feet; dated 1981-1991) contains primarily correspondence. Box 1 holds material dated 1985-1986, box 2 contains material dated 1987-1988, box 3 holds material dated 1988 and 1990. In box 3 there are also files from a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services retirement income security policy study group (1981). Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryMEADE, James Edward, 1907-1995, economist, 1921-[1995]MEADE, James Edward, 1907-1995, economist 1921-[1995]132 boxesEnglishFrenchPortugueseSpanish; CastilianChineseJapaneseBritish library of political and economic scienceMeier, Gerald M. Gerald Meier papers, 1928-2003.Meier, Gerald M.Gerald Meier papers, 1928-2003.5400 items (7.75 lin. ft.)The papers document the growth of Meier's career from a student of economics to an academic economist. The collection includes personal and professional correspondence; lectures; course notes taken as a student or developed for his lectures on international economic relations; syllabi, reading lists, exams, and other course materials; items relating to conferences attended; published writings; and audiotapes of interviews relating to the evolution of development economics. Meier's correspondence is largely of a professional nature, and is chiefly concerned with international and development economics. Prominent among his correspondents were Peter Bauer, Gottfried Haberler, W.A. Lewis, Hla Myint, Paul Rosenstein-Rodan, W.W. Rostow, Dudley Seers, H. W. Singer, and Paul Streeten. Many of Meier's major publications are represented in the Writings and Speeches Series. These include ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, EMERGING FROM POVERTY, THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS OF DEVELOPMENT, INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT, LEADING ISSUES IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, PIONEERS IN DEVELOPMENT, and the PROBLEMS series of books. Though there are folders containing materials on conferences Meier attended, by and large the Subject Series contains a great deal of course materials. From his days as a student, there are notes, exams, syllabi, reading lists, and bibliographies from Reed College, Harvard University and the University of Oxford concerning courses taken under Chamberlin, Haberler, Hicks, Leontief, and others. Also, there is material from law courses Meier enrolled in at Yale and Stanford Universities. Among the lecture notes from Williams College, Wesleyan, Yale, and Stanford Universities there are also syllabi, exams, and reading lists representing his tenure as a professor. Of particular note are folders concerning Meier's role in the genesis and growth of the College of Social Studies at Wesleyan University. Accession (2010-0211) also contains work from Meier's career, including reprints of his articles (dated 1949-1984) and materials from his lectures and presentations on development economics (dated 1986-2002). Also included are some miscellaneous correspondence, grant proposals, and book reviews. A large portion of the accession relates to Meier's writings, including his drafts and correspondence from several books. Another section of interest is Meier's collection of materials on the career of John Hicks, a 1972 Nobel prize-winning economist. The collection includes article reprints written by Hicks, some clippings about his life, and an undated, unpublished manuscript titled "The Theory of Demand and the Theory of Welfare." Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryMeier, Gerald M. Papers, 1941-1998.Meier, Gerald M.Papers, 1941-1998.4500 items.The papers document the growth of Meier's career from a student of economics to an academic economist. The collection includes personal and professional correspondence; lectures; course notes taken as a student or developed for his lectures on international economic relations; syllabi, reading lists, exams, and other course materials; items relating to conferences attended; published writings; and audiotapes of interviews relating to the evolution of development economics. Meier's correspondence is largely of a professional nature, and is chiefly concerned with international and development economics. Prominent among his correspondents were Peter Bauer, Gottfried Haberler, W.A. Lewis, Hla Myint, Paul Rosenstein-Rodan, W.W. Rostow, Dudley Seers, H. W. Singer, and Paul Streeten. Many of Meier's major publications are represented in the Writings and Speeches Series. These include ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, EMERGING FROM POVERTY, THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS OF DEVELOPMENT, INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT, LEADING ISSUES IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, PIONEERS IN DEVELOPMENT, and the PROBLEMS series of books. Though there are folders containing materials on conferences Meier attended, by and large the Subject Series contains a great deal of course materials. From his days as a student, there are notes, exams, syllabi, reading lists, and bibliographies from Reed College, Harvard University and the University of Oxford concerning courses taken under Chamberlin, Haberler, Hicks, Leontief, and others. Also, there is material from law courses Meier enrolled in at Yale and Stanford Universities. Among the lecture notes from Williams College, Wesleyan, Yale, and Stanford Universities there are also syllabi, exams, and reading lists representing his tenure as a professor. Of particular note are folders concerning Meier's role in the genesis and growth of the College of Social Studies at Wesleyan University. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryDavidson, Paul, 1930-. Paul Davidson papers, 1961-2002 and n.d.Davidson, Paul, 1930-Paul Davidson papers, 1961-2002 and n.d.10100 items.This collection (00-423) (8100 items; dated 1956-2000) documents Davidson's professional life and his interest in post-Keynesian economics, primarily through professional correspondence with colleagues, but also through some writings by Davidson and others (ca. 1965-2000). Correspondents include Philip Arestis, Peter Bernstein, Robert Clower, Alfred Eichner, Robert Eisner, John Kenneth Galbraith, Geoffrey Harcourt, Sir John Hicks, Jan Kregel, Macmillan Publishers, Allan H. Meltzer, Basil J. Moore, Edward Nell, Don Patinkin, Joan Robinson, James Tobin, and Sidney Weintraub. The addition (02-206) (2000 items, 1.5 linear feet; dated 1961-2002 and n.d.) contains mainly Davidson's incoming and outgoing professional correspondence. Correspondents include John Kenneth Galbraith, as well as editors of THE AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW and THE ECONOMIC JOURNAL. Correspondence in box 1 is dated 1961-2002 and n.d.; box 2, 1976-1989; box 3, 1963-2002. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryClower, Robert W. Papers, 1916-2000 and n.d.Clower, Robert W.Colander, David C.Davidson, Paul, 1930-Hicks, John Richard, Sir, 1904-Howitt, Peter, 1946-Leijonhufvud, Axel.Patinkin, Don.Papers, 1916-2000 and n.d.7255 items.Most of the Clower papers are professional correspondence covering his entire professional career, from 1949 to 1999. The professional correspondence includes recommendations for jobs, and promotion and tenure letters; referee reports; invitations; a few clippings and photographs. The collection also includes manuscript drafts and manuscript fragments of his writings; two cassette tapes; course materials, including lecture notes, syllabi, coursepacks, student papers, reading lists, exams, and course grades; printed materials such as articles, jounals, and one bound typescript of a book. Topics covered in the collection include monetary theory, price theory, price determination, employment, banking, disequilibrium, stock-flow analysis, Keynesian economics/macroeconomics, Say's Law, and mathematical economics. The collection does not contain a complete set of drafts of Clower's writings. Many of the writings are untitled typescripts and fragments of notes. Thus the researcher may need to identify some writings. The professional correspondence includes many prominent names of 20th century economics; Milton Friedman, John R. Hicks, Peter Howitt, Arjo Klamer, David Laidler, Axel Leijonhufvud, Don Patinkin, Joan Robinson, Paul Samuelson, and others. Duke University faculty are represented in the Clower papers by Craufurd Goodwin, Neil DeMarchi, and Roy Weintraub. Also included are: Moses Abramowitz, Jess Benhabib, Clive Bull, David Colander, Paul Davidson, Frank Hahn, John Haltiwanger, Tom Hazlett, Roger Kormendi, Larry Kotlikoff, Robert Solow, and Sir Alan Walters. A 2000 addition contains additional correspondence, journal articles and files related to a 1979 antitrust suit. The addition to the collection contains primarily writings by Clower (ca. 1800 items, 1952-2000 and n.d.). Includes copies of his 1952 thesis, copies of published articles and unpublished writings (especially from the 1950s), and lectures. A number of items were written with Peter Howitt of Ohio State University. Also included are a few items of correspondence; materials related to courses taught by Clower, including two electronic documents; a file of curriculum vitae and other biographical information, including one color photograph and two electronic image files; two copies of John Maynard Keynes's THE GENERAL THEORY OF EMPLOYMENT INTEREST AND MONEY annotated by Clower; and a few diplomas and awards. Several files of writings and speeches by Clower's father, the economist F. W. (Fay Walter) Clower, are also included (200 items, ca. 1916-ca. 1946). (01-088) Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins Library