List of Contributors
The Dynamics of Intervention: Regulation and Redistribution in the Mixed Economy
ISBN: 978-0-76231-053-1, eISBN: 978-1-84950-237-5
ISSN: 1529-2134
Publication date: 1 January 2004
Citation
(2004), "List of Contributors", Kurrild-Klitgaard, P. (Ed.) The Dynamics of Intervention: Regulation and Redistribution in the Mixed Economy (Advances in Austrian Economics, Vol. 8), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. ix-x. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1529-2134(05)08021-X
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Advisory Board
- Editor's Note
- Editor's introduction
- The Political Economy of the Dynamic Nature of Government Intervention: An Introduction to Potentials and Problems
- The Dynamics of Interventionism
- From Laissez-Faire to Zwangswirtschaft
- Austrian Economics, Praxeology and Intervention
- Regulation, more Regulation, Partial Deregulation, and Reregulation: The Disequilibrating Nature of a Rent-Seeking Society
- The Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle: Reflections on Some Socio-Economic Effects
- The Political Economy of Crisis Management: Surprise, Urgency, and Mistakes in Political Decision Making
- The Conflict About the Middle of the Road: The Austrians Versus Public Choice
- If Government is so Villainous, How Come Government Officials Don’t Seem Like Villains? With a New Postscript
- Ulysses and the Rent-Seekers: The Benefits and Challenges of Constitutional Constraints on Leviathan
- The Ongoing Growth of Government in the Economically Advanced Countries
- Interventionist Dynamics in the U.S. Energy Industry
- The Dynamics of Interventionism: A Case Study of British Land Use Regulation
- Harm Reduction and Sin Taxes: Why Gary Becker is Wrong
- Government Regulation of Behaviour: In Public Insurance Systems
- Interventionism and the Structure of the Nazi State, 1933–1939
- Law and politics: Reflections upon the concept of a spontaneous order and the EU
- Professor Tullock on Austrian Business Cycle Theory
- The Austrian view of depressions