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Department of July 2021

CURRICULUM VITAE a) NAME:

DIMAND, Robert William Full Professor, Tenured Department of Economics Brock University 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1 E-mail: [email protected] Phone: (905) 688-5550, ext. 3125 (Office), (905) 664-3893 (Home) Fax: (905) 688-6388 (Office)

Sabbatical address (Fall 2018, Fall 2019, Fall 2021):

Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, PO Box 208281 New Haven, CT 06520-8281 USA

Phone: (203) 432-3718 (Office), (203) 343-7824 (Home) b) DEGREES:

Ph.D., Economics, Yale University, 1983 Dissertation: “From the Treatise to The General Theory: The Formulation of Keynes’ Theory of and .” Adviser: . M. Phil., Economics, Yale University, 1980 M.A., Economics, Yale University, 1979 B.A. (Honours), Economics & History, McGill University, 1978 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY:

1991-present Professor, Department of Economics, Brock University Fall 2021 Visiting Professor, Yale University (deferred from 2020) 2008-2020 Adjunct Professor of Economics, McMaster University Sept.-Dec. 2018 Visiting Fellow, Cowles Foundation, Yale University November 2017 Professeur invité, Université de Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne April-May 2017 Professeur invité, Université de Lyon 2 Lumière April-July 2014 Visiting Research Fellow, John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Free University of Berlin Sept.-Dec. 2013 Senior Fellow, Center for the History of Political , Duke

-1- University, Durham, NC February 2009 Professeur invité, Université de Bourgogne, Dijon December 2008 Professeur invité, Université de Paris II Assas-Panthéon 1992-1995 Visiting Fellow, Department of Economics, Yale University 1992-1993 Barbara Hogate Ferrin Term Professor of Economics, Connecticut College, New London, CT 1987-1991 Associate Professor, Department of Economics, Brock University 1983-1987 Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Carleton University 1982-1983 Lecturer, Department of Economics, Carleton University 1980-1982 Teaching Fellow, Yale University d) HONOURS & AWARDS:

Senior Fellow, Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis, 2018

Brock University Distinguished Research and Creative Activity Award, 2016

Association for Social Economics, Thomas F. Devine Award, 2016 (lifetime achievement award for research)

Best Practices Recognition Award, Brock University Centre for Teaching, Learning & Educational Technologies (CTLET) May 2007

Making a Difference Award, Brock University Services for Students with disABILITIES, April 2007

Faculty of Social Sciences Award for Excellence in Teaching, 2012

Faculty of Graduates Studies Mentoring Award, 2013

Chancellor’s Chair for Research Excellence, Brock University, 2002-2005

ANBAR Electronic Intelligence Citation of Excellence (1998) for “Irving Fisher and Modern ,” , 1997

Royal Economic Society: shared first prize, essay for members of the Society under the age of 30 on the occasion of the Keynes centenary, 1983 e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES:

Member, Editorial Board, History of Economic Ideas, since September 2000, Associate editor from 2020 Member, Editorial Board, Journal of , 2001-2012 Member, Editorial Board, History of Economics Review, since July 2006 Member, Editorial Board, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, since July 2006

-2- Member, Advisory Board, European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, since May 2009 Member, Editorial Board, Review of , since February 2012; Associate Editor since 2017 Member, Editorial Advisory Board, History of , December 2012 to January 2019 Treasurer, Canadian Public Policy, since December 2012

Executive Council of Canadian Economics Association, 2005-2008, newsletter editor 2007- 2021, Secretary-Treasurer 2012-2017

Executive Committee, History of Economics Society, 2006-2009; Vice-President, 2009- 2010, President-elect 2011-2012, President 2012-2013

Chair, Best Article Committee, History of Economics Society, 2002-2003 (member of committee 1999-2004); Chair, Joseph Dorfman Dissertation Award Committee, History of Economics Society, 2008-2009; Chair, search committee for journal editor, 2012-2013; Chair, Nominating Committee, 2013-14 and 2015-16, and Chair, Distinguished Fellows Committee, 2013-2014

Association for Social Economics, Board of Trustees, January 2011-December 2015; local organizer, 15th World Congress of Social Economics, Brock, June 2015

Council, European Society for the History of Economic Thought, 2016-19; Vice-President of Council, 2018-21 f) RECENT ADMINISTRATIVE :

Chair, Department of Economics, Brock University, 1998-2003; acting chair, January to June 2013

Member, University Senate, member, Senate Budget Advisory Committee, and Vice-Chair, Senate Graduate Studies Committee, 2004-2005; Member, Senate Graduate Studies Committee, 2007-2008

Graduate Program Director, Master of program, and member, Graduate Council of Brock University, 2002-2005 and from July 2007 to December 2012; Acting Graduate Program Director, Winter 2018 and Winter 2019

Co-Coordinator, International Political Economy, 2002-2005 and from July 2006

Internal Consultant, Undergraduate Program Review of Mathematics Department, 2003

External Consultant, review of economics programs at Wilfrid Laurier University, Winter 2016, King’s College, University of Western Ontario, Winter 2017, Laurentian University, Fall

-3- 2017

Member, Committee on Appointment/Reappointment of Dean of Business, 2003

g) GRADUATE COURSES:

At Brock, ECON 5P01 Microeconomic Theory, Fall 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016, ECON 5P04 Topics in (coordinator), Winter 2011, Winter 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, and mathematics half of ECON 5N11 Mathematics and Statistics Review for Master of Business Economics students, August 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011. At McMaster, ECON 716 History of Economic Thought, Winter 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018. Taught graduate courses in Monetary Theory and Policy, International Monetary Theory and Policy, and History of Economic Thought at Carleton University from 1982 to 1987 (two graduate courses each year), and History of Monetary Theory at University of Burgundy, Dijon, February 2009. Coordinator, ECON 5F00 Research Essay at Brock University, 2006-2007. Rapporteur and member of international jury for two PhD dissertations at University of Paris I (Pantheon-Sorbonne): Rebeca Gomez Betancourt, December 2008, Christophe Schinckus, February 2009. Member of international jury for PhD dissertations at the University of Strasbourg (Lionel Rischmann, December 2013) and ENS Lyon (Samuel Demeulemeester, December 2019) and for two Habilitation à Diriger Recherche (HDR) defences: Rebeca Gomez Betancourt, University of Lyon II, June 2013, and Sylvie Rivot, University of Strasbourg, June 2013. External examiner, PhD examination, African Economics Research Consortium (AERC): April 2010 (20 students), April 2011 (31 students), April 2012 (30 students), April 2013 (43 students), and April 2014 (17 students). Taught PhD course on history of macroeconomics, University of Lyons II, April-May 2017; taught AERC refresher course in macroeconomics for teaching in “fragile and post-conflict states,” Nairobi, September 2017; master’s course on history of macroeconomics since Keynes, PHARE, University of Paris 1 (Pantheon- Sorbonne), November 2017 h) RESEARCH FUNDING:

EXTERNAL:

YEAR SOURCE TYPE AMOUNT PURPOSE ROLE (PER YEAR) (Principal investigator, co-principals, co-applicants, etc)

1997 History of Economic Thought O A$750 Travel Society of Australia

1997 Irving Fisher Gesellschaft O DM 2,500 Travel

Cowles Foundation, Yale Research and

-4- 2000 University O US $2,200 editing Principal Investigator

2000 HRDC F $1,800 Research Co-principal

2001 Royal Economic Society O £250 Travel 2002 Cowles Foundation, Yale O US$350 Travel

2003 Royal Economic Society O £275 Travel Co-principal with R. 2006 Monte dei Paschi di Siena O US$15,000 Conference grant Mundell, A. Vercelli to hold IEA conference

Travel 2007 Sophia University, Tokyo O $2,500 Travel 2009 Thomas Guggenheim O $2,000

Program in the History of Economic Thought, Ben

Gurion University of the Negev Travel 2011 Université Lumière de Lyon 2 O $1,400 Travel 2011 Thomas Guggenheim O $2,000

Program in the History of

Economic Thought, Ben Gurion University of the

Negev 2012 O US$1,200 Center for the History of Travel Political Economy, Duke

University Travel 2012 American Finance O US$1,500 Association

1er Congresso de Travel 2012 O $3,000 Investigacion Economica

Center for the History of Research (Senior 2013 O US$12,000 Political Economy, Duke Fellow) University

2014 John F. Kennedy Institute for O 22,500 euros Research (Visiting North American Studies, Free Fellow) University of Berlin

SSHRC Aid to Scholarly Applicant, as secretary- 2015-18 Publishing $90,000 Editorial support treasurer, Canadian for Canadian J. of Economics Association

Economics Thomas Guggenheim

2018 Program in the History of Economic Thought, Ben O $2,000 Travel Gurion University of the

Negev

Cowles Foundation for Research 2018-19 Research in Economics, Yale F US$120,000 Principal University

INTERNAL:

YEAR SOURCE TYPE AMOUNT PURPOSE ROLE

-5- (PER YEAR) (Prinicipal investigator, co-principals, co-applicants, etc)

1993-94 SSHRC (GRG) G $500 Research Principal Investigator

1996-97 SSHRC (GRG) G $1,000 Research Principal Investigator

1998 SSHRC (GRG) G $1,000 Research Principal Investigator

1996 TISC O $1,425 Travel

1999 TISC O $1,400 Travel

1997 President’s Fund - release O $3,000 Research Principal Investigator time

2002-2005 Chancellor’s Chair for O $15,000 Research Principal Investigator Research Excellence

Dean of Social Sciences Program chair and 2012 O $20,000 History of conference organizer Economics Society annual

conference

2012 Committee for Research in O $2,000 the Social Sciences (CRISS) Speaker, HES, S. Hollander

2012 O $2,000 Speaker, HES, P. CRISS Groenewegen

O 2012 $2,000 Research CRISS

i) PUBLICATIONS:

1) Life-time summary (count): - Books authored ...... 4 - Books edited………………………………………………………………….13 - Chapters in books (excluding encyclopaedia entries) ...... 43 - Papers in refereed journals……………………………………………….….111 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings ...... 14 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 142 - Others - Encyclopaedia articles (e.g. 10 in New Palgrave, 8 in Int. Ency. Soc. Sci.) 109 - Book Reviews...... 57 - Articles in Canadian Economics Association Newsletter………....…………3 (before becoming newsletter editor)

-6- -Invited articles in journals (presidential address, obituaries) …..…………….10

2) Details as above:

Books authored:

1. The Origins of the , Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, and Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1988; paperback, Edward Elgar, 1992.

2. M.A. Dimand and R.W. Dimand, A History of , Vol. I, From the Beginnings to 1945, London and New York: Routledge, 1996; paperback edition 2014.

3. James Tobin, London and Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, Great Thinkers in Economics, 2014.

4. Irving Fisher. London and Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, Great Thinkers in Economics, 2019.

Books edited:

1. Macroeconomics: Issues in Theory and Policy, Lexington, MA: Ginn Press, 1986.

2. M.A. Dimand, R.W. Dimand and E.L. Forget, Eds., Women of : Essays on the History of Women in Economics, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1995.

3. M.A. Dimand and R.W. Dimand, eds., The Foundations of Game Theory, Edward Elgar Reference Collection, 3 vols., Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1997.

4. R. W. Dimand, Editorial introduction and supplement to Irving Fisher, The Making of Numbers, Vol. VII of Works of Irving Fisher, ed. W. J. Barber assisted by R. W. Dimand and K. Foster, consulting ed. J. Tobin, 14 vols., London: Pickering and Chatto, 1997.

5. R. W. Dimand, M. A. Dimand, and E. L. Forget, eds., A Biographical Dictionary of Women Economists, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2000 (paperback 2004; second edition in preparation).

6. The Origins of Macroeconomics, 10 volumes, London and New York: Routledge, 2002

7. R. W. Dimand and C. Nyland, eds., The Status of Women in Classical Economic Thought, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2003.

8. The Origins of , 10 volumes, London and New York:

-7- Routledge, 2004.

9. R. W. Dimand and J. Geanakoplos, eds., Celebrating Irving Fisher: The Legacy of a Great , 2005 Special Invited Issue of American Journal of Economics and Sociology 64:1 (January 2005) with simultaneous publication in hard and soft covers, Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers; introduction (pp. 3-18), Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1198.

10. Irving Fisher: Critical Responses, 3 volumes, London and New York: Routledge, 2007.

11. R. W. Dimand, R. A. Mundell, and A. Vercelli, eds., Keynes’s General Theory After Seventy Years, Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan; International Economic Association Conference Volume No. 147, 2010 (Chinese translation, Beijing: China Financial Publishing House, 2012, Japanese translation in progress)

12. R. W. Dimand and Harald Hagemann, eds., The Elgar Companion to , Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2019.

13. Kirsten Madden and Robert W. Dimand, eds., Routledge Handbook of the History of Women’s Economic Thought, London and New York: Routledge, 2018; paperback 2020.

Chapters in books and encyclopaedia entries:

1. “The Development of Keynes’s Theory of Employment”, in O.F. Hamouda and J.N. Smithin, eds., Keynes and Public Policy After Fifty Years, Vol. I, Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, and New York: New York University Press, 1988: 121-130.

2. “A Neglected Monetary Standard Alternative: Gold/Commodity Bimetallism: Comment”, in O.F. Hamouda, R. Rowley, and B.M. Wolf, eds., The Future of the International Monetary System, Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar and White Plains, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1989, 212-213.

3. “ and the General Equilibrium Theory of Value and Distribution”, in R. Tullberg, ed., Alfred Marshall in Retrospect, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1990: 49-60.

4. “Expectations, Confidence and the Keynesian Revolution: A Comment on `Rethinking the Keynesian Revolution’” in John B. Davis, ed., The State of Interpretation of Keynes, Boston: Kluwer Academic, 1994: 123-130.

5. “The Neglect of Women’s Contributions to Economics”, in M.A. Dimand, R.W. Dimand, and E.L. Forget, eds., Women of Value, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT:

-8- Edward Elgar, 1995: 1-24.

6. “`I Place No Great Faith in Political Arithmetick’: and Empirical Political Economy”, in I.H. Rima, ed., Measurement and Quantification in Economic Analysis, London: Routledge, 1995: 22-30.

7. “The Role of Credit in Fisher’s ”, in A.J. Cohen, H. Hagemann, and J.N. Smithin, eds., , Macroeconomics, and Financial Institutions, Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997: 101-108.

8. - - and M.A. Dimand, “From Games of Pure Chance to Strategic Games: French Probabilists and Early Game Theory”, in C. Schmidt, ed., Uncertainty in Economic Thought, Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1996: 157-168.

9. “Macroeconomics without IS-LM”, in Warren Young and Ben-Zion Zilberfarb, eds., Macroeconomics and IS-LM, Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000, pp. 121- 32.

10. “Keynes, Tarshis, Real and Money , and Employment”, in O.F. Hamouda and B.B. , eds., Keynesianism and the Keynesian Revolution in America: Essays in Memory of Lorie Tarshis, Cheltenham, UK, and Lyme, NH: Edward Elgar, 1998: 91- 102.

11. “Rae and International Trade”, in O.F. Hamouda, C. Lee, and D. Mair, eds., The Economics of , London and New York: Routledge, 1998: 177-184.

12. Contributions to D. Glasner, ed., Business Cycles and Depressions: An Encyclopedia, New York: Garland, 1997. a) debt- theory, pp 140-141 b) , pp 261-262 c) John Maynard Keynes, pp 355-358 d) macroeconometric modelling, historical development, pp 419-421 e) Alfred Marshall (with D. Glasner), pp 429-430 f) Eugen Slutsky, pp. 626-657 g) , pp. 686-688

13. “Bretton Woods” and “Harry Dexter White”, in T. Cate with D. Colander and G.C. Harcourt, eds., Encyclopedia of Keynesian Economics, Aldershot, UK, and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1997, pp 50-54 and 632-635 (2nd ed., 2013, pp. 49-53 and 674-677).

14. “William Trufant Foster”, in John A. Garraty and Mark C. Carnes, eds., American National Biography, New York: Oxford University Press, 1999, Volume 8, pp 309- 310. Later contributions to American National Biography: “James Tobin” (2016), “” (with Harald Hagemann, 2020), Alfred Cowles 3rd (2021)

-9-

15. “Irving Fisher and Modern Macroeconomics”, American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings of the American Economic Association, 87:2 (May 1997), 442-444 (in proceedings of roundtable on 50th anniversary of Fisher’s death, not refereed).

16. “The Beveridge Retort: Beveridge’s Response to the Keynesian Challenge”, in Luigi L. Pasinetti and Bertram Schefold, eds., The Impact of Keynes on Economics in the 20th Century, Cheltenham, UK, and Lyme, NH: Edward Elgar, 1999, pp 221-239.

17. “Fisher’s Monetary Macroeconomics”, in The Economics of Irving Fisher, ed. Hans- E. Loef and Hans-G. Monissen, Cheltenham, UK, and Lyme, NH: Edward Elgar, 1999, pp 35-58.

18. Contributions to P. O’Hara, ed., Encyclopaedia of Political Economy, London and New York: Routledge, 1999: a) “Game Theory”, with M. A. Dimand, pp 384-386 b) “Keynes and the Classics Debate”, pp 621-623 c) “Keynesian Political Economy”, pp 623-627 d) “Keynesian Revolution”, pp 627-629

19. Contributions to R.W. Dimand, M.A. Dimand, E.L. Forget, eds., A Biographical Dictionary of Women Economists, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA, 2000: a) “Emily Greene Balch (1867-1961)”, pp 21-25 b) “Caroline Wells Healey Dall (1822-1912)”, pp 122-125 c) “Caroline Augusta Foley Rhys Davids (1857-1942)”, pp 129-131 d) “Minnie Throop England (1875-1941)”, pp 153-155 e) “Theresa Schmid McMahon (1878-1961)”, pp 304-306 f) “Michèle A. Pujol (1951-1997)”, pp 347-349 g) “Lise Salvas-Bronsard (1940-1995)”, pp 376-377 h) “Mabel Frances Timlin (1891-1976)”, pp 441-442

20. “Women in the Canon of Economics” in Evelyn L. Forget and Sandra J. Peart, eds., Reflecting on the Canon in : Essays in Honour of Samuel Hollander, London and New York: Routledge, 2000, pp 451-481.

21. “Keynesian Economics,” in Jonathan Minchie, ed., Reader’s Guide to the Social Sciences, London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001.

22. “Zero-sum games,” in R. J. Barry Jones, ed., Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy, London and New York: Routledge, 2001, pp. 1723-24.

23. Contributions to Brian Snowdon and Howard Vane, eds., Encyclopedia of Macroeconomics, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, December 2002: a) “: Keynesian approach”, pp. 35-39

-10- b) “Hicks, John Richard”, pp. 322-326 c) “Real balance effect”, pp. 611-615 d) “Ricardian equivalence”, pp. 628-632 e) “Schools of thought in macroeconomics”, pp. 653-660

24. “Laffer Curve Theory,” in Dictionary of American History, New York: Simon and Schuster, 2003.

25. Contributions to Cynthia Northrup, ed., The American Economy: A Historical Encyclopedia, ABC-Clio, 2003: a) “Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System”, p. 29. b) “Coin’s Financial School”, pp. 51-52. c) “Full Employment”, pp. 124-25. d) “Gross National Product”, pp. 138-39. e) “”, p. 184. f) “National Income and Product Accounts”, pp. 197-98. g) “”, p. 286.

26. “Irving Fisher, La théorie de l’intêret,” in X. Greffe, J. Lallement, and M. de Vroey, eds., Dictionnaire des Grandes Ouevres Economiques, Geneva: Dalloz, 2002, pp. 137-145.

27. “Interwar Monetary and Theories,” in W. Samuels, J. Biddle, and J. Davis, eds., Blackwell Companion to the History of Economic Thought, Boston: Blackwell, 2003, pp. 325-342. (Shorter version of #48 in next section.)

28. “Priscilla Wakefield: An Early Feminist Response to Classical Political Economy,” in R. W. Dimand and C. Nyland, eds., The Status of Women in Classical Economic Thought, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2003, pp. 194-205.

29. “Women in Nassau Senior’s Economic Thought,” in R. W. Dimand and C. Nyland, eds., The Status of Women in Classical Economic Thought, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2003, pp. 224-240.

30. Contributions to Cynthia Northrup, ed., Encyclopedia of World Trade from Ancient Times to the Present, Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 2005: a) “Coffee”, pp. 186-87. b) “Comparative advantage”, pp. 206-207. c) “Economic Consequences of the Peace, The (1919)”, pp. 298-299. d) “General Theory of Employment, and Money, The”, pp. 399-400. e) “Mill, John Stuart”, pp. 652-53. f) “Opium”, pp. 716-718. g) “Rae, John”, pp. 764-65. h) “Ricardo, David”, pp. 790-91. i) “Smith, Adam”, pp. 838-39.

-11-

31. “Classical Political Economy and Orientalism: Nassau Senior’s Eastern Tours,” in Eiman Ein-Zelabdin and S. Charusheela, eds., Post-Colonialism Meets Economics, London and New York: Routledge, 2004, pp. 73-90.

32. Contributions to Donald Rutherford and Morgen Witzel, eds., Biographical Dictionary of British Economists, Bristol: Thoemmes Press, 2004: a) “Vera Anstey”, with M.-T. Maxwell Awadalla, pp. 16-17 b) “Ruth Cohen”, with M.-T. Maxwell Awadalla, pp. 250-52 c) “Clara Collet”, pp. 261-62 d) “Mary Paley Marshall,” pp. 745-48 e) “Marjorie Eve Robinson”, with M.-T. Maxwell Awadalla, pp. 1045-46 f) “Ricardus de Mediavilla”, pp. 1014-1015.

33. “Game Theory,” in Maryanne Cline Horowitz, ed., New Dictionary of the History of Ideas, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2005, pp. 853-57.

34. “Fisher, Keynes, and the Corridor of Stability,” in R. W. Dimand and John Geanakoplos, ed., Celebrating Irving Fisher, Malden, MA: Blackwell, and special issue of American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 64:1 (January 2005), pp. 185-99.

35. Contributions to Ross B. Emmett, ed., The Biographical Dictionary of American Economists, London and New York: Thoemmes Continuum, 2006: (a) “Cherriman, John Bradford,” pp. 135-137 (b) “Davis, Harold Thayer” (with Alan Chaffe), pp. 202-204 (c) “Fisher, Irving,” pp. 284-291 (d) “Hardy, Charles Oscar” (with Alan Chaffe), pp. 417-419 (e) “Mavor, James,” pp. 606-609 (f) “Mitchell, Wesley Clair,” pp. 630-636 (g) “Neumann, John von,” pp. 656-658 (h) “Norton, John Pease” (with Alan Chaffe), pp. 665-667 (i) “Rogers, James Harvey,” pp. 716-718 (j) “Roos, Charles Frederick” (with Alan Chaffe), pp. 718-720 (k) “Tarshis, Lorie,” pp. 808-812 (l) “Timlin, Mabel Frances,” pp. 819-821 (m) “Tobin, James,” pp. 822-831 (n) “Walsh, Correa Moylan” (with Alan Chaffe), pp. 885-887.

36. Contributions to William H. McNeill et al, eds., Berkshire Encyclopedia of World History, Great Barrington, MA: Berkshire Publishing, 2005, 2nd ed. 2010: (a) “International Monetary System”, pp. 1010-1012. (b) “Trade Cycles”, pp. 1845-1848.

37. --- and Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh, “Louis Bachelier,” in Geoffrey Poitras, ed.,

-12- Pioneers of , Vol. 1: Before Irving Fisher, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2006, pp. 225-237.

38. “Comment: Chairing the Federal Reserve,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19:3 (Summer 2005), pp. 244-45.

39. Contributions to S. Durlauf and L. E. Blume, ed., The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, 2nd ed., London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008: (a) “Canada, Economics in” (with Robin Neill) (b) “Catchings, Waddill” (c) “Foster, William, Trufant” (d) “Kyrk, Hazel” (with Richard Lobdell) (e) “Macroeconomics, origin and history of” (f) “Marcet, Jane Haldimand” (with Evelyn Forget) (g) “Martineau, Harriet” (with Evelyn Forget) (h) “Monetary economics, history of”, reprinted in Steven N. Durlauf and Lawrence E. Blume, ed., The New Palgrave Monetary Economics, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, pp. 189-204. (i) “Timlin, Mabel” (j) “Balch, Emily Greene” (added 2010 to The New Palgrave Online)

40. Contributions to W. A. Darity, ed., International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, 2nd ed., New York: Gale (Simon and Schuster), 2008: (a) “Efficient markets hypothesis” (b) “Fisher, Irving” (c) “Koopmans, Tjalling” (d) “” (with Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh) (e) “” (f) “Neoclassical growth model” (g) “Noncooperative games” (h) “Subjective probability”

41. “Tobin, Globalization, and Flows,” in Claude Gnos and Louis- Philippe Rochon, eds., and Financial Stability, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2009, pp. 190-205.

42. “David Laidler’s Contributions to the History of Monetary Economics,” in Robert Leeson, ed., David Laidler’s Contributions to Economics, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, and New York: St. Martin’s, 2010, pp. 60-84.

43. “Irving Fisher and his Students as Financial Economists,” in Geoffrey Poitras, ed., Pioneers of Financial Economics, Vol. 2, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2007, pp. 45-59.

44. “’The Consequences to the Banks of the Collapse of Money Values’, 1931 and

-13- 2009,” in Arie Arnon, Warren Young, and Jimmy Weinblatt, eds., Perspectives on Keynesian Economics, Springer Verlag, 2011, pp. 233-245.

45. ---- and Robert H. Koehn, “Those Who Forget the Past Are Condemned to Repeat It: Lessons from Past Financial Crises That Were Ignored by the Deregulations of the Past Fifteen Years,” in Joelle J. Leclaire, Tae-Hoo Jo, and Jane E. Knodell, eds., Heterodox Analyses of and Reform, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2011, pp. 35-46.

46. “Fisher, Irving,” in R. Cont, ed., Encyclopedia of Quantitative Finance, Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, 2010, pp. 711-714.

47. “What Keynesian Revolution? A Reconsideration Seventy Years After The General Theory,” in Robert W. Dimand, Robert A. Mundell, and Alessandro Vercelli, eds., Keynes’s General Theory After Seventy Years, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, and New York: St. Martin’s, International Economic Association Conference Volume No. 147, 2010, pp. 287-311.

48. Barbara J. Spencer and -----, “The diagrams of the Solow-Swan growth model,” in Mark Blaug and Peter Lloyd, eds., Famous Figures and Diagrams in Economics, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2010, pp. 426-431.

49. ---- and Robin Neill, “Marshall in Canada,” in Tiziano Raffaelli, Giacomo Becattini, Katia Caldari, and Marco Dardi, eds., The Impact of Alfred Marshall’s Ideas: The Global Diffusion of his Work, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2010, pp. 53-58.

50. “The roots of the present are in the past: the relation of post-war developments in macroeconomics to interwar business cycle and monetary theory,” in Thomas Cate, ed., Keynes’s General Theory Seventy-Five Years Later, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2012, pp. 103-126.

51. --- and Robert H. Koehn, “ responses to financial crises: lenders of last resort in interesting times,” in Louis-Philippe Rochon and Salewa ‘Yinka Olawoye, eds., Monetary Policy and Central Banking, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2012, pp. 112-129.

52. “Prisoner’s Dilemma,” in Morris Altman, ed., Real World Decision-Making: An Encyclopaedia of Behavioural Economics, ABC-Clio, 2015

53. “Efficient Markets Theory,” in Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi, eds., Encyclopaedia of Central Banking, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015

54. “Macroeconomics, history of, up to 1933,” in International Encyclopaedia of the

-14- Social and Behavioral Sciences, 2nd edition, ed. James Wright, article 03058, Elsevier, 2015

55. ----- and Kojo Saffu, “Polly Hill,” in Robert Cord, ed., The Palgrave Companion to Cambridge Economics, London and Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 857-870, 2017

56. Contributions to Gilbert Faccarello and Heinz Kurz, eds., Handbook of Economic Analysis, Volume I, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017, “Tobin, James,” pp. 675-681, and (with Khalid Yahia) “Nash, John Forbes, Jr,” pp. 718-720, 2016

57. Contributions to Kirsten Madden and Robert W. Dimand, eds., Routledge Handbook of the History of Women’s Economic Thought, London and New York: Routledge, 2018: Omolola Fowler and Robert W. Dimand, Chapter 20: “The First 100 Years of Female Economists in Sub-Saharan Africa,” pp. 375-91, and Talia Yousef and Robert W. Dimand, Chapter 21: “Women Economists of the Arab Homeland,” pp. 392-406

58. Contributions to Robert W. Dimand and Harald Hagemann, eds., The Elgar Companion to John Maynard Keynes, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishers, 2019: Chapter 18: “Irving Fisher,” pp. 116-21 Chapter 21 “The Economic Consequences of the Peace,” pp. 134-38 Chapter 22 “A Tract on ,” pp. 139-44 Chapter 23 “The Economic Consequences of Mr. Churchill,” pp. 145-50 Chapter 25 “Am I a Liberal?” pp. 157-61 Chapter 29 “Lectures on ‘The Monetary Theory of Production’ and ‘The General Theory of Employment’,” pp. 181-85 Chapter 33 “The Multiplier,” pp. 210-17 Chapter 56 “William H. Beveridge,” pp. 362-68 Chapter 65 “Lorie Tarshis,” pp. 424-28 Chapter 70 “Mabel Timlin,” pp. 456-61 Chapter 72 “Lawrence R. Klein,” pp. 468-73 Chapter 75 “James Tobin,” pp. 488-93 Chapter 90 “Keynesianism in Canada,” pp. 588-94

59. “Stephen Leacock on political economy and the unsolved riddle of social justice,” in Guillaume Vallet, ed., Inequalities and the : Breakthroughs and Legacies, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2020, pp. 264- 281.

60. Contributions to L. P. Rochon and S. Rossi, eds., Encyclopaedia of Post-Keynesian Economics, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, forthcoming: “ School,” “,” “General Theory, Interpretations of”

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61. “The Monetary Economics of Mary Theresa Rankin,” in Paula Hawkins and Ionna Negru, eds., Festschrift for Sheila Dow, London and New York: Routledge, forthcoming.

62. “The Cowles Commission for Research in Economics at the University of Chicago, 1939-1955,” in Robert Cord, ed., The Palgrave Companion to Chicago Economics, Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming.

63. “Jacob Marschak 1898-1977: From a Russian Revolutionist to President-Elect of the American Economic Association” (with Harald Hagemann), in Vladimir Avtonomov and Harald Hagemann, eds., Russian and Western Economic Thought: Mutual Influences and Transfer of Ideas, Springer Nature, Springer Series in the History of Economic Thought, forthcoming.

Articles in the Canadian Economics Association Newsletter

1. “Michèle Pujol (1951-1997),” 17 (August 1998), pp. 12-14.

2. “ (1908-2006),” 34 (August 2006), pp. 6-7.

3. “The Founding of the Canadian Economics Association, 1966,” 34 (August 2006), pp. 7-9.

(Excludes contributions to Newsletter after becoming Newsletter editor in 2007)

Not elsewhere classified

1. Lecture on Louis Bachelier and the randomness of asset , filmed at Ohio State University, October 2010; was posted on “History of Finance” section of American Finance Association/Journal of Finance website: www.afajof.org/association/historyfinance.asp

2. Lecture on Irving Fisher and financial economics, filmed at Ohio State University, September 28, 2012; was posted on “History of Finance” section of American Finance Association/Journal of Finance website: www.afajof.org/association/historyfinance.asp

3. Frances Woolley and ----, “Thomas Kenneth Rymes (1932-2011): In Memoriam,” Review of Income and Wealth, Series 58, No. 3 (September 2012), pp. 588-592 (commissioned obituary)

4. “Presidential Address: The Global Economic Crisis in Light of the History of Interwar Monetary Economics,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 36:1 (March 2014), 3-21.

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5. “William J. Barber,” History of Political Economy, Vol. 49, No. 4 (Winter 2017), pp. 535-536 (commissioned obituary).

6. “Canadian Social Scientists and Policy-Making since Confederation,” Canadian Public Policy, Vol. 43, No. 4 (December 2017), pp. 376-390 (invited article for “Canada 150” special section).

7. “Craufurd Goodwin as an Historian of Canadian Economic Thought,” History of Political Economy, Vol. 51, No. 1 (February 2019), pp. 115-28 (invited article for memorial symposium).

8. “One Hundred Years Ago: John Maynard Keynes’s The Economic Consequences of the Peace,” History of Economics Review No. 73 (August 2019), pp. 1-13.

9. “The much-exaggerated death of Keynesian economics,” Review of Keynesian Economics, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Spring 2020), pp. 36-45 (invited article for symposium)

10. “Keynesian Economics at the Cowles Commission,” Review of Keynesian Studies (Keynes Society of Japan), No. 2 (November 2020), pp. 22-45, invited article.

11. “Comments on Bruna Ingrao and Claudio Sardoni, Banks and Finance in Modern Macroeconomics: A Historical Perspective,” Cahiers d’Économie Politique, No. 78 (October 2020), pp. 283-292 (invited article for symposium)

Papers in refereed journals: (listed in order of acceptance)

1. “Keynes on and Exchange Rates”, Atlantic Economic Journal, 14:3, September 1986, pp. 81-82.

2. “The Macroeconomics of the Treatise on Money”, Eastern Economic Journal, 12:4, October-December 1986, pp 431-441, reprinted in J. Cunningham Wood, ed., John Maynard Keynes: Critical Assessments, Second Series, London and New York: Routledge, 1994, Vol. VII, pp. 21-33.

3. “An Early Canadian Contribution to Mathematical Economics: J.B. Cherriman’s 1857 Review of Cournot”, Canadian Journal of Economics, 21:3, August 1988, pp 606-616. Reprinted in M. Blaug, ed., Pioneers in Economics, Section III, Vol. 24, Von Thunen, Cournot and Dupuit, Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1992, pp 477-483.

4. M.A. Dimand and - - , “Optimal Storage for a Small Open Economy under Price and Production Uncertainty”, Journal of International Economic Integration, 4:1, Spring 1989, pp 88-98.

-17- 5. - - and E.G. West, “DeStutt de Tracy: A French Precursor of the Virginia School of Public Finance”, History of Economic Society Bulletin, 11:2, Fall 1989, pp 210-215.

6. - - and M.A. Dimand, “J.M. Keynes on Buffer Stocks and Commodity Price Stabilization”, History of Political Economy, 22:1, Spring 1990, pp 113-124. Reprinted in J. Cunningham Wood, ed., John Maynard Keynes: Critical Assessments, Second Series, London and New York: Routledge, 1994, Vol. VIII, pp 80-90.

7. “Fixed Capital in the Ricardian Theory of Value and Distribution”, Review of Political Economy, 2:3, November 1990, pp 292-309. Reprinted in M. Blaug, ed., Pioneers in Economics, Section II, Vol. 14, David Ricardo, Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1991, pp 233-250.

8. “American Economists and the New Economics in the 1930s: A Critique of the Davis Thesis”, Atlantic Economic Journal, 18:4, December 1990, pp 42-47.

9. “Keynes, Kalecki, Ricardian Equivalence and the Real Balance Effect”, Bulletin of Economic Research, 43:3, July 1991, pp 289-292. Reprinted in M. Blaug, ed., Pioneers in Economics, Sec. IV, Vol. 39, Michal Kalecki, Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1992, pp 186-189, and in J. Cunningham Wood, ed., John Maynard Keynes: Critical Assessments, Second Series, London and New York: Routledge, 1994, VIII, pp 282-285.

10. “Cranks, Heretics and Macroeconomics in the 1930s”, History of Economics Review 16, Summer 1991, pp 11-30.

11. “Political Protest and Political Arithmetic on the Niagara Frontier: Robert Gourlay=s Statistical Account of Upper Canada”, Brock Review, 1:1, 1992, pp. 52-63.

12. “The Dance of the Dollar: Irving Fisher’s Monetary Theory of Economic Fluctuations”, History of Economics Review, 20, Summer1993, pp. 161-172.

13. “The Case of Brownian Motion: The Contribution of Bachelier”, British Journal for the History of Science, 26, 1993, pp. 233-234.

14. “Alfred Marshall and the Whewell School of Mathematical Economists”, Manchester School, 61, December 1993, pp. 439-441.

15. “100% Money: Irving Fisher and Monetary Reform in the 1930s”, History of Economic Ideas, 1:2, 1993:2, pp. 59-76.

16. “Irving Fisher’s Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions”, Review of Social Economy, 52:1, Spring 1994, pp 92-107. Revised reprint in Hans-E. Loef and Hans G. Monissen, eds., The Economics of Irving Fisher, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 1999, pp. 141-156.

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17. “Mr. Meade’s Relation, Kahn’s Multiplier, and the Chronology of the General Theory”, Economic Journal, 104, September 1994, pp. 1139-1142.

18. “Cournot, Bertrand, and Cherriman”, History of Political Economy, 27:3, Fall 1995, pp. 563-578.

19. “Irving Fisher, J.M. Keynes and the Transition to Modern Macroeconomics”, in A. Cottrell and M.S. Lawlor, eds., New Perspectives on Keynes, supplement to History of Political Economy, 27, 1995, pp. 247-266.

20. I. Hardeen and - -, “Testing for Induced Financial Innovation in Canada”, International Advances in Economic Research, 1:1, February 1995, pp. 19-22.

21. - - and M.A. Dimand, “Von Neumann and Morgenstern in Historical Perspective”, Revue d’Economie Politique, 105:4, juillet-aout 1995, pp. 539-57; reprinted in C. Schmidt, ed., Game Theory and Economic Analysis, London and New York: Routledge, December 2002.

22. “Early Testing of Macroeconomic Theories before Tinbergen”, Indian Journal of Applied Economics, 5:3, special issue in memory of Jan Tinbergen, April-June 1996, pp 55-68. Reprinted in K. Puttaswamaiah, ed., Tinbergen and Modern Economics, New Delhi: Indus Publishing Company, 1996, pp. 55-68.

23. “Macroeconomics with and without Keynes”, History of Economics Review, 24, Summer 1995, pp. 23-42.

24. “Carl Menger, Crown Prince Rudolph, and Public Policy: A Liberal Critique of Feudal Privilege”, History of Economics Review, 24, Summer 1995, pp. 95-97.

25. “Adam Smith and the Late Resolution of the Quakers of Pennsylvania: A Response to a False Report” (appendix to S. Pack, “Slavery, Adam Smith’s Economic Vision and the Invisible Hand”), History of Economic Ideas, IV:1-2, (special issue, Adam Smith Revisited, 1996), pp. 266-269.

26. “Hawtrey and the Multiplier,” History of Political Economy, 29:3, Fall 1997, pp. 549- 556.

27. “The Fall and Rise of Irving Fisher’s Macroeconomics”, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 20:2, June 1998, pp. 191-202.

28. “Fisher and Veblen: Two Paths for American Economics”, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 20:4, December 1998, pp. 449-466.

29. “Letter: Irving Fisher and Indexed Bonds”, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 13:1,

-19- Winter 1999, pp. 224-225.

30. “Irving Fisher and the Fisher Relation: Setting the Record Straight,” Canadian Journal of Economics, 32:3, May 1999, pp. 744-750.

31. - - and M.H.I. Dore, “Cournot, Bertrand, and Modern Game Theory: A Comment on Morrison”, Atlantic Economic Journal, 27:3, September 1999, pp. 325-333.

32. “Women Economists of the 1890s”, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 21:3, September 1999, pp. 269-288.

33. “Minnie Throop England on Crises and Cycles: A Neglected Early Macroeconomist”, , 5:3, November 1999, pp. 107-126.

34. “Irving Fisher and the Inconstant Velocity of Circulation”, International Journal of Applied Economics and (special issue in honour of ), Vol. 9:3, July-September 2001, pp. 359-374.

35. “Beveridge on Unemployment and Cycles before The General Theory”, History of Economic Ideas, 7:3, Fall 1999, pp. 33-51.

36. “Nineteenth Century American Feminist Economics: From Caroline Dall to Charlotte Perkins Gilman”, American Economic Review (American Economic Association Papers & Proceedings, 90:2, May 2000, pp. 480-484.

37. “Hawtrey and the Keynesian Multiplier: A Response to Ahiakpor”, History of Political Economy, 32:4, Winter 2000, pp. 909-913.

38. “Strategic Games: From Theory to Application”, in Roger E. Backhouse and Jeff Biddle, eds., The History of Applied Economics, Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy, 32, 2000, pp. 199-225.

39. - - and M.H.I. Dore, “Keynes’s Casino Capitalism, Bagehot’s International Currency, and the Tobin Tax: Historical Notes on Preventing Currency Fires”, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 22:4, Summer 2000, pp. 515-528.

40. - - and R.H. Koehn, “Vickrey, Eisner, the Budget, and the Goal of Chock-Full Employment”, Journal of Economic Issues, 34:2, June 2000, pp. 491-497.

41. “Oskar Morgenstern on Apparent Price Rigidity in the 1930s: a comment on Kovenock and Widdows”, European Journal of Political Economy, 16:3, 2000, pp. 571-573.

42. “Irving Fisher and the : The Last Phase”, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 22:3, September 2000, pp. 329-348.

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43. “Ricardo and International Trade Theory”, History of Economic Ideas, 8:3, 2000, pp. 7-24.

44. “Harry G. Johnson as a Chronicler of the Keynesian Revolution,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology 60:3, July 2001, pp. 667-691.

45. “Irving Fisher on the International Transmission of Booms and Depressions Through Monetary Standards”, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 35:1, February 2003, pp. 49-90. Reprinted in Pierre Siklos, ed., The Economics of Deflation, (International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, no. 189), Vol. 1, pp. 272- 282, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2005.

46. -- and Robert H. Koehn, “From Edgeworth to Fisher to Vickrey: A Comment on Michael J. Boskin’s Vickrey Lecture,” Atlantic Economic Journal 30:2, June 2002, pp. 205-208.

47. “’s Contribution to the Genesis of the Multiplier: A Response to Luca Fiorito,” History of Economic Ideas 10:1, 2002, pp. 29-36.

48. “Patinkin on Irving Fisher’s Monetary Economics,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought 9:2, Summer 2002, pp. 308-326.

49. “Interwar Monetary and Business Cycle Theory,” Research in History of Economic Thought and Methodology, 21-A, 2003, pp. 121-148.

50. “Irving Fisher’s Rejection of the `So-Called Business Cycle’,” History of Economic Ideas, 11:1, 2003, pp. 129-150.

51. “On Limiting the Domain of Inequality: The Legacy of James Tobin,” Eastern Economic Journal, 29:4(symposium in memory of James Tobin), Fall 2003, pp. 559-564.

52. “Competing Visions for the US Monetary System, 1907-1913: The Quest for an Elastic Currency and the Rejection of Fisher’s Compensated Dollar Rule for Price Stability,” Cahiers d’Economie Politique, No. 45, Autumn 2003, pp. 101-121.

53. R. W. Dimand, E. L. Forget, and C. Nyland, “Retrospective: Gender and Classical Economics,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 18:1, Winter 2004, pp. 229-240.

54. “James Tobin and the Transformation of the IS-LM Model,” Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy 36, The IS-LM Model: Its Rise, Fall, and Strange Persistence, ed. Michel De Vroey and Kevin D. Hoover, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004, pp. 165-89; reprinted as Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1620.

-21- 55. – and Indra Hardeen, “Barbara Wootton’s Lament for Economics and Vision of a Social Economics,” Forum for Social Economics, 33:1, Fall 2003, pp. 23-32.

56. “Economists and the Shadow of ‘The Other’ Before 1914,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology 64:3, July 2005, pp. 827-850.

57. “Heilbroner and Polanyi: A Shared Vision,” Social Research, 71:2, Summer 2004, (issue in honour of Robert Heilbroner), pp. 385-398.

58. “Echoes of Veblen’s Theory of Business Enterprise in the Later Development of Macroeconomics: Fisher’s Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions and the Financial Instability Theories of Minsky and Tobin,” International Review of Sociology 104:3, November 2004, pp. 461-70.

59. “David Hume on Canadian Paper Money,” short version in Shorter Papers section of Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 37:4, August 2005, pp. 783-87, full version published in Margaret Schabas and Carl Wennerlind, eds., Hume’s Political Economy, London and New York: Routledge, 2008.

60. “The Teaching of the Worldly Philosophers on Free Trade: Reassessing the Case for Free Trade in Light of Smith, Ricardo, Rae and Marx,” Journal of Economic Asymmetries, 2:2 (December 2005), pp. 49-69.

61. “Keynes on Global Economic Integration,” Atlantic Economic Journal, 34:2 (June 2006), pp. 175-182.

62. “Irving Fisher and Financial Economics,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 29:2 (June 2007), pp. 153-166.

63. “Keynes, IS-LM, and the Marshallian Tradition,” History of Political Economy, 39:1 (Spring 2007), pp. 81-95.

64. Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh and ----, “On the Von Neumann Minimax Theorem,” Fixed Point Theory and It Applications, Banach Center Publications 77, 2007, pp. 23-34.

65. ----- and William Veloce, “Charles F. Roos, Harold T. Davis, and the Quantitative Approach to Business Cycle Analysis and Economic Dynamics in the 1930s and Early 1940s,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 14:3 (September 2007), pp. 519-542.

66. “The Creation of Heroes and Villains as a Problem in the History of Economics,” in E. Roy Weintraub and Evelyn L. Forget, eds., Economists’ Lives: Biography and Autobiography in the History of Economics (Durham, NC: Duke University Press) Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy, 39 (2007), pp. 76-95.

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67. “ and Modern Macroeconomics,” Review of Political Economy, 20:1 (January 2008), pp. 23-39; reprinted in Steven Pressman, ed., Leading Contemporary Economists: Economics at the Cutting Edge, London and New York: Routledge, 2009, pp. 412-429; Italian translation in Il Ponte (2007), n. 12.

68. ----- and Robert H. Koehn, “A View from the Stands: John Kenneth Galbraith on the Discipline of Economics and the Governance of the Public, Corporate and Financial Sectors,” Journal of Economic Asymmetries 4:2 (December 2007), pp. 39-54.

69. ----- and Robert H. Koehn, “Galbraith’s Heterodox Teacher: Leo Rogin’s Historical Approach to the Meaning and Validity of Economic Theory,” Journal of Economic Issues 42:2 (June 2008), pp. 561-568.

70. ----- and Robert H. Koehn, “Central Bankers in the Minsky Moment: How Different Central Banks Have Responded to the Threat of Debt-Deflation,” Journal of Economic Asymmetries 5:1 (June 2008), pp. 139-148.

71. “Central Themes in Paul Davidson’s John Maynard Keynes,” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 32:1 (Fall 2009), pp. 59-72.

72. Ryan Bruno and -----, “The Corridor of Stability in Tobin’s Keynesian Model of and Depression,” International Journal of Applied Economics and Econometrics, 17:1 (January-March 2009), pp. 17-25.

73. ----- and Barbara Spencer, “Trevor Swan and the Neoclassical Growth Model,” in Mauro Boianovsky and Kevin D. Hoover, eds., and the Development of Growth Economics, Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy, Vol. 41, 2009, pp. 107-125.

74. ---- and Steven N. Durlauf, “James Tobin and Growth Theory: Financial Factors and Long-Run ,” in Mauro Boianovsky and Kevin D. Hoover, eds., Robert Solow and the Development of Growth Economics, Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy, Volume 41, 2009, pp. 182-199; reprinted as Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1619.

75. Ann Mari May and -----, “Trouble in the Inaugural Issue of the American Economic Review: The Cross/Eaves Controversy,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 23:3 (Summer 2009), pp. 189-204.

76. “The Cowles Commission and Foundation on the Functioning of Financial Markets from Irving Fisher and Alfred Cowles to Harry Markowitz and James Tobin,” Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines no. 20 (2009), pp. 79-100.

-23- 77. Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh and -----, “Von Neumann, Ville, and the Minimax Theorem,” International Game Theory Review, 12:2 (June 2010), pp. 115-137.

78. ---- and Robert H. Koehn, “Heilbroner and Bernstein on and Budget Deficits,” International Journal of Applied Economics and Econometrics, 17:3 (July-September 2009), pp. 182-194.

79. ---- and William Veloce, “Alfred Cowles and Robert Rhea on the Predictability of Stock Prices,” Journal of Business Inquiry, 9:1 (2010), pp. 56-64.

80. ---- and Robert H. Koehn, “How the Actions of Central Bankers Are Shaped by Past Currency Traumas,” Clio’s Psyche, 16:4 (March 2010), pp. 428-433.

81. ---- and Robert H. Koehn, “Jane Jacobs, and Economics,” Journal of Economic Asymmetries, 7:1 (June 2010), pp. 175-185.

82. Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh and -----, “A Simpler Proof of the Von Neumann Minimax Theorem,” American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 118, No. 7 (August/September 2011), pp. 636-641.

83. “Tobin as an Econometrician,” in Marcel Boumans, Arianne Dupont-Kiefer, and Mary S. Morgan, eds., Histories on Econometrics, Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy 43 (2011), pp. 166-187; reprinted as Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1618.

84. -----, Geoffrey Black, and Evelyn L. Forget “Women in the ASSA Meetings,” Oeconomia: History/Philosophy/Method, Vol.1, No. 1 (March 2011), pp. 33-50.

85. “Emily Greene Balch, Political Economist,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Vol. 70, No. 2 (April 2011), pp. 163-178.

86. ---- and Robert H. Koehn, “Guy Routh’s Heterodox Critique of ,” Forum for Social Economics, Vol. 41, Nos. 2-3 (2012), pp. 252- 262.

87. “A Hundred Years Ago: Irving Fisher’s Purchasing Power of Money,” History of Economics Review, No. 54 (Summer 2011, i.e. December 2011, summer in Australia), pp. 131-143.

88. ---- and Geoffrey Black, “Clare de Graffenreid and the Art of Controversy: A Prize-winning Woman Economist in the First Decade of the American Economic Association,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 34, No. 3 (September 2012), pp. 339-353.

89. ---- and Rebeca Gomez Betancourt, “Retrospectives: Irving Fisher’s Appreciation

-24- and Interest (1896) and the Fisher Relation,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 26, No. 4 (Fall 2012), pp. 185-196.

90. “Adolphe Landry and Irving Fisher on Circulation and Interest,” History of Economic Theory and Policy, Vol. 2 (2012), pp. 115-123 (part of Special Section: Adolphe Landry).

91. “David Hume and Irving Fisher on the Quantity Theory of Money in the Short Run and the Long Run,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 20, No. 2 (April 2013), pp. 284-304.

92. “‘I May Be a Don Quixote but I am Trying to be a Paul Revere’: Irving Fisher as a Public Intellectual,” in Steven Medema and Tiago Mata, eds., Economists as Public Intellectual, Annual Supplement to History of Political Economy, Vol. 45, 2013, 20-37.

93. ---- and Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh, “How General Equilibrium Came to North America: Irving Fisher’s Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices (1891) and his Hydraulic Model of General Equilibrium,” Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, Vol. 37 (2012), pp. 97-118; Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1624.

94. “What to Tell a Graduate Course in Macroeconomics about Keynes,” Research in History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Volume 33, 2015, pp. 163-178.

95. Debbie Burke and ----, “Methods and Masters: Christopher Bliss and Nicholas Stern’s Contribution to ,” International Journal of Applied Economics and Econometrics, issue in memory of K. Puttaswamaiah, Vol. 23, No. 2 (April-June 2015), pp. 1-16.

96. Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh and ---, “Louis Bachelier’s 1938 Monograph on the Calculus of Speculation: and Randomness of Asset Prices in Bachelier’s Later Work,” Revue d’histoire des mathématiques, Tome 24, Fascicule 1 (2018), pp. 41-106; Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1643.

97. Constance André-Aigret and ---, “Populism versus Economic Expertise: J. Laurence Laughlin debates William (Coin) Harvey,” Forum for Social Economics (April 2018), Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 164-172.

98. Ann Mari May and ---, “Women in the Early Years of the American Economic Association,” History of Political Economy, Vol. 51, No. 4 (August 2019), pp. 671-702; Cowles Foundation Paper no. 1654.

99. “Duelling Presidential Addresses: The Keynesian Response to Friedman’s ‘The Role of Monetary Policy’,” History of Economic Ideas, special issue on 50th

-25- anniversary of natural rate hypothesis (edited by Sylvie Rivot and Robert Dimand), Vol. 18, No. 3 (December 2018), pp. 123-44.

100. “Adam Smith on Portuguese Wine and English Cloth,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 25, No. 6 (December 2018), pp. 1264-1281.

101. “William J. Barber on Irving Fisher and American Economic Thought,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 41, No. 3 (September 2019), pp. 343- 349.

102. Robert W. Dimand, Olivia Gong, Michael O’Reilly, Thomas Velk and Mengyue (Rebecca) Zhao, “Measuring U.S. 19th Century Economic Activity Using Unexploited Railway and Postal Micro-level Data,” Review of Economic Analysis, Vol. 12 (2020), pp. 1-57.

103. “J. Laurence Laughlin versus Irving Fisher on the Quantity Theory of Money, 1894 to 1913,” Oxford Economic Papers, Vol. 72, No. 4 (October 2020), pp. 1032-1049.

104. Robert W. Dimand and Kojo Saffu, “Polly Hill: Crossing and Contesting the Boundaries of Anthropology, Economics, African Studies ad Entrepreneurial Studies,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 43, No. 2 (June 2021), pp. 279-296

105. Jasmeen Rahman and Robert W. Dimand, “The Emergence of Geographical Economics at the Contested Boundaries of Economics, Geography and ,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 43, No. 2 (June 2021), pp. 241-261

106. “Macroeconomic Dynamics at the Cowles Commission from the 1930s to the 1950s,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 27, No. 4 (June 2020), pp. 564-581.

107. Robert W. Dimand and Harald Hagemann, “Jacob Marschak and the Cowles Approaches to the Theory of Money and Assets,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 27, No. 6 (December 2020), pp. 901-918.

108. “The Cowles Summer Research Conferences on Economics and Statistics, 1935- 1940: Building a Community for Mathematical Economics and Econometrics,” forthcoming in Revue d’Economie Politique special issue on the history of conferences in economics.

109. “Leon Walras, Irving Fisher and the Cowles Approach to General Equilibrium Analysis,” Oeconomia, forthcoming.

-26- 110. “Keynes, Knight and Fundamental Uncertainty: A Double Centenary, 1921- 2021,” Review of Political Economy, Vol. 33 (forthcoming October 2021, already published online).

111. Robert W. Dimand and Sylvie Rivot, “From ‘Science as Measurement’ to ‘Theory and Measurement’: The Cowles Commission and the Emerging Chicago School on Empirical Methodology,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 28, No. 6 (forthcoming December 2021).

Papers in refereed conference proceedings:

1. “The Reception of the Treatise of Money: A Review of the Reviews”, in D.A. Walker, ed., Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. II, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1989, pp 87-96.

2. “Early Mathematical Theories of Business Cycles”, in D.E. Moggridge, ed., Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. IV, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1990, pp 150-161.

3. M.A. Dimand and - -, “Moral Sentiments and the Competitive Marketplace”, in W.J. Barber, ed., Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. V, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1991, pp 61-72.

4. “‘A Prodigy of Constructive Work’: J.M. Keynes on Indian Currency and Finance”, in W.J. Barber, ed., Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. VI, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1991, pp 29-35.

5. M.A. Dimand and - -, “Benjamin Graham and the Ever-Normal Granary”, in S.T. Lowry,ed., Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. VII, Aldershot, UK, and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1992, pp 209-219.

6. - - and M.A. Dimand, “Early Mathematical Models of Conflict: The Contributions of Lanchester and Richardson”, in Karen I. Vaughn, ed., Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. X, Aldershot, UK, and Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar, 1994, pp 79-89.

7. “The Quest for an Ideal Index: Irving Fisher and The Making of Index Numbers”, Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. XIV: The Economic Mind in America, ed., M. Rutherford, London and New York: Routledge, 1998, pp 128-144.

8. “Minsky and Tobin on the Instability of a Monetary Economy,” in and Mario Seccarecia, eds., Central Banking in the Modern World: Alternative Perspectives, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2004, pp. 226-43.

-27- 9. “Early Experimental Games,” in Philippe Fontaine and Robert J. Leonard, eds., The Experiment in the History of Economics, London and New York: Routledge, 2005, pp. 5-24.

10. “How Keynes Came to Canada: Mabel Timlin and Keynesian Economics,” in Mathew Forstater and L. Randall Wray, eds., The Continuing Relevance of The General Theory: Keynes for the 21st Century, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008, pp. 57-79.

11. “Lessons from the 1929 crash and the 1930s debt-deflation: what Bernanke and King learned, and what they could have learned,” in Claude Gnos and Louis- Philippe Rochon, eds., Credit, Money and Macroeconomic Policy, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2011, pp. 33-44.

12. “Tobin’s Keynesianism,” in The Return to Keynes, proceedings of Tokyo symposium on Keynes, edited by Bradley Bateman, Toshiaki Hirai, and Maria Cristina Marcuzzo, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2010, pp. 94-107; Chinese edition, China Financial Publishing House, 2011; Japanese edition, Tokyo University Press, 2014.

13. ---- and Masazumi Wakatabe, “The Kyoto University Economic Review (1926-1944) as importer and exporter of economic ideas: bringing Lausanne, Cambridge, Vienna and Marx to Japan,” in Heinz D. Kurz, Tamotsu Nishizawa, and Keith Tribe, eds., The Dissemination of Economic Ideas, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2011, pp. 260-291 (selected papers from joint conference of European Society for the History of Economic Thought and Japan Society for the History of Economic Thought).

14. “Expectations in Tobin’s Macroeconomics,” in Arie Arnon, Warren Young and Karine van der Beek, eds., Expectations: Theory and Applications from Historical Perspectives, Cham, Switzerland: Springer, 2020, pp. 109-120 (selected papers from Guggenheim Conference on the History of Economic Thought, Ben Gurion University of the Negev).

Abstracts and/or papers read since 1993:

1. “Irving Fisher’s Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions”, North American Economics and Finance Association session at Allied Social Science Associations, Anaheim, CA, January 1993.

2. “The Neglect of Women’s Contributions to Economics”, joint session of History of Economics Society and American Economic Association, Allied Social Science Associations, Anaheim, CA, January 1993, and Kress Society seminar, Harvard, September 1993.

-28- 3. “100% Money: Irving Fisher and Monetary Reform in the 1930s”, History of Economics Society, Philadelphia, June 1993.

4. “French Probabilists and the Early History of Game Theory”, Association Charles Gide pour l’Étude de la Pensée Économique, Paris, September 1993.

5. “Irving Fisher, J. M. Keynes and the Transition to Modern Macroeconomics”, North American Economics and Finance Association session at Allied Social Science meetings, Boston, January 1994, and History of Political Economy conference, “New Perspectives on Keynes”, Winston-Salem, NC, April 1994.

6. - - with M.A. Dimand, “Von Neumann and Morgenstern in Historical Perspective”, joint session of History of Economics Society and American Economic Association, Boston, January 1994.

7. “A Neglected Early Macroeconomist: Minnie T. England on Crises and Cycles”, History of Economics Society, Babson Park, MA, June 1994; revised version, York- Toronto history of economic thought workshop, January 1997.

8. “The Role of Credit in Fisher’s Monetary Economics”, NAEFA session at ASSA, Washington, January 1995, Kress Society (Harvard), April 1995, HES, Notre Dame, June 1995.

9. “Ricardo and International Trade Theory”, HES session at ASSA, Washington, January 1995, Kress Society (Harvard), April 1995, HES, Notre Dame, June 1995.

10. “Macroeconomics with and without Keynes” and “Keynes, Tarshis, Real and Money Wages, and Employment”, AEA sessions, and “How Keynes Came to Canada: Mabel Timlin and Keynesian Economics”, IAFFE session at ASSA, San Francisco, January 1996.

11. “Rae and International Trade”, John Rae Bicentenary Conference, University of Aberdeen, March 1996.

12. “Keynes, Fisher, and the Corridor of Stability”, Canadian Economics Association, St. Catharines, May 1996.

13. “Fisher and the Inconstant Velocity of Circulation”, Association Charles Gide pour l’Etude de la Pensée Économique, Toronto, June 1996.

14. “The Quest for an Ideal Index: Irving Fisher on The Making of Index Numbers”, History of Economics Society, Vancouver, June 1996.

15. “Irving Fisher and Modern Macroeconomics”, Southern Economics Association, Washington, DC, November1996, and American Economic Association roundtable,

-29- New Orleans, January 1997.

16. “Thinking About Solutions to Games: Some Changes in Game Theory, 1944-1960”, AEA/HES joint session, New Orleans, January 1997, and European Society for History of Economic Thought (ESHET), Marseille, March 1, 1997.

17. “The Beveridge Retort: Beveridge’s Response to the Keynesian Challenge”, ESHET, Marseilles, February 28, 1997, and Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, July 1997.

18. “The Fall and Rise of Irving Fisher’s Macroeconomics”, ESHET, Marseilles, March 1, 1997.

19. “Landry and Fisher on Interest and Circulation”, Colloque Adolphe Landry, Université de Corse, Corte, September 1997.

20. “Classical Political Economy and Orientalism: Nassau Senior=s Eastern Tours”, History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations, Chicago, January 1998; International Association for Feminist Economics, University of the West Indies, Barbados, June 2003.

21. “Irving Fisher on the International Transmission of Booms and Depressions Through Monetary Standards”, Canadian Economic Association, Ottawa, May 1998.

22. “How Keynes Came to Canada: Mabel Timlin and Keynesian Economics”, History of Economics Society, Montreal, June 1998, European Society for the History of Economic Thought, Valencia, February 1999.

23. “Women in the Canon of Economics”, Reflecting on the Canon: Conference in Honour of Samuel Hollander, Toronto, September 1998, and International Association for Feminist Economics, Ottawa, June 1999.

24. “Women Economists of the 1890s”, History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations, New York, January 1999.

25. “Strategic Games from Theory to Application”, History of Political Economy conference on “The History of Applied Economics”, Duke University, Durham, NC, March 1999.

26. “Experimental Economic Games: The Early Years”, European Conference on the History of Economics, Cachan, France, April 1999.

27. “Irving Fisher and the Quantity Theory of Money: The Last Phase”, Canadian Economics Association, Toronto, May 1999.

-30- 28. “Game Theory: An Alternative Approach to Economics or Just another Tool? The Case of Macroeconomics”, History of Economics Society, Greensboro, NC, June 1999, and Association Charles Gide pour l’Étude de la Pensée Économique, Paris, September 1999.

29. “Emily Greene Balch, Political Economist” and “Nineteenth Century American Feminist Economics: From Caroline Dall to Charlotte Perkins Gilman”, in CSWEP/AEA sessions, and “Vickrey, Eisner, the Budget, and the Goal of Chock-Full Employment” (with R.H. Koehn), in AFEE session, at Allied Social Science Associations, Boston, 7-9 January, 2000.

30. “Harry Johnson as a Chronicler of the Keynesian Revolution,” “Irving Fisher and the ‘So-Called Business Cycle’”, and “Priscilla Wakefield: An Early Feminist Response to Classical Political Economy,” History of Economics Society, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, June 30-July 1, 2000.

31. “From Von Neumann to Nash,” “Economists and ‘The Other’ Before 1914,” and “The Status of Women in Nassau Senior’s Economic Thought,” Allied Social Science Associations, New Orleans, January 5-7, 2001.

32. “Patinkin on Irving Fisher’s Monetary Economics,” Conference on Patinkin and the Development of Modern Economic Theory, Lausanne, September 2001.

33. “American Traditions in Business Cycle Theory: Fisher and England,” Conference on Business Cycles, University of Nice, Sophia-Antipolis, September 2001.

34. “Keynes, IS-LM, and the Marshallian Tradition,” History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations, Atlanta, January 2002, and Keynes conference, Association Charles Gide, UQAM, Montreal, June 2002.

35. “Competing Visions for US Monetary Policy, 1907-1913,” History of Economics Society, University of California at Davis, July 2002, and Thornton bicentenary conference, University of Paris I, September 2002.

36. “On Limiting the Domain of Inequality: The Legacy of James Tobin,” Association for session at ASSA, Washington, January 2003, and Eastern Economic Association, , February 2003.

37. “James Tobin and the Evolution of the IS-LM Model,” History of Political Economy conference on IS-LM model, Duke University, Durham, NC, April 2003; York- University of Toronto workshop on history of economic thought, October 2003; History of Economics Society session at ASSA, San Diego, January 2004.

38. “David Hume on Canadian Paper Money,” Canadian Economics Association, Ottawa, June 2003; summarized in author’s absence, History of Economics Society, Duke

-31- University, Durham, NC, July 2003; Scotland Day, Brock University, November 2003.

39. “Echoes of Veblen’s Theory of Business Enterprise in the Later Development of Macroeconomics,” Veblen conference, Bevagna, Italy, November 2003; Association for Evolutionary Economics session, ASSA, San Diego, January 2004.

40. “Louis Bachelier, the Efficient Markets Hypothesis, and the Origins of Mathematical Finance” (with Hichem Ben-El-Mechaiekh), An Afternoon of Financial Mathematics and Mathematical Economics, Brock University, April 2004.

41. “Tobin’s q, Keynes’s Q, and Myrdal’s Q” (with Harald Hagemann), Canadian Economics Association, Toronto, June 2004.

42. “Irving Fisher and Modern Finance,” History of Economics Society, Toronto, June 2004.

43. “The Teaching of the Worldly Philosophers on Free Trade,” Ryerson University, October 2004, and Athenian Policy Forum, Temple University, Philadelphia, January 2005.

44. “Financial Economics at the Cowles Commission from Alfred Cowles and Irving Fisher to Harry Markowitz and James Tobin,” History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations, Philadelphia, January 2005.

45. “Becoming Invisible: Women in Economics in the First Half of the Twentieth Century,” joint session of International Association for Feminist Economics and National Association of Economics Educators, Allied Social Science Associations, Philadelphia, January 2005.

46. “The Roots of the Present Are in the Past: Recurring Themes in Interwar and Contemporary Macroeconomics,” conference on the history of macroeconomics, Louvain, Belgium, January 2005, and Canadian Economics Association, Vancouver, June 2008.

47. “Von Neumann, Ville, and the Minimax Theorem” (with Hichem Ben-El- Mechaiekh), STOREP conference on history of , University of Siena, Italy, June 2005.

48. “Louis Bachelier and the Origins of Mathematical Finance” (with Hichem Ben-El- Mechaiekh), History of Economics Society, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, June 2005, and Canadian Economics Association, Montreal, May 2006.

49. “Charles F. Roos, Harold T. Davis, and the Quantitative Approach to Business

-32- Cycle Analysis and Economic Dynamics in the 1930s and Early 1940s” (with William Veloce), conference on “Cycles, Markets and Networks: The Quantitative Approach to Business Cycle Analysis in the 1930s and 1940s,” University of Antwerp, Belgium, September 2005.

50. “Tobin, Globalization, and International Capital Flows,” conference on “Political Economy of Governance,” University of Burgundy, Dijon, December 2005, and Athenian Policy Forum, Boston, January 2006.

51. “Keynes on Global Economic Integration,” History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations, Boston, January 2006.

52. “The Creation of Heroes and Villains as a Problem in the History of Economics,” History of Political Economy conference on life-writing in the history of economics, Duke University, Durham, NC, April 2006.

53. “Heilbroner and Bernstein on Fiscal Policy” (with Robert Koehn), Athenian Policy Forum, University of Waterloo, June 2006, Association for Social Economics session at ASSA, Chicago, January 2007.

54. “What Keynesian Revolution?” History of Economics Society, Grinnell College, Iowa, June 2006, International Economic Association conference on “Keynes’s General Theory After Seventy Years” (organized by Robert Dimand, , and Alessandro Vercelli), Siena, Italy, July 2006, Keynes conference, University of Missouri – Kansas City, September 2006, UQAM, November 2006, Waseda University, Tokyo, March 2007, Buffalo State College (SUNY), April 2007, PHARE, University of Paris I, December 2008, University of Burgundy, Dijon, February 2009.

55. “David Laidler’s Contributions to the History of Monetary Economics,” conference in honour of David Laidler, University of Western Ontario, August 2006, History of Economics Society, Denver, June 2009 (on occasion of David Laidler becoming HES Distinguished Fellow).

56. “Tobin’s Keynesianism,” University of Toronto, March 2007, Keynes conference at Sophia University, Tokyo, March 2007, conference on History of Recent Economics, University of Paris X – Nanterre, June 2007; McMaster University, November 2008; ERMES, University of Paris II, December 2008, University of Burgundy, Dijon, February 2009, Centre Walras-Pareto, University of Lausanne, February 2009.

57. “The Corridor of Stability in Tobin’s Keynesian Model of Recession and Depression” (with Ryan Bruno), Canadian Economics Association, Halifax, June 2007.

-33- 58. “Edmund Phelps and Modern Macroeconomics,” History of Economics Society, Fairfax, Virginia, June 2007, European Society for the History of Economic Thought, Strasbourg, July 2007.

59. “General Equilibrium Reaches North America: Irving Fisher’s Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices” (with Hichem Ben-El- Mechaiekh), Conference on General Equilibrium as Knowledge, University of Paris I (Pantheon-Sorbonne), September 2007, University of Toronto, March 8, 2008, and History of Economics Society, York University, Toronto, June 2008.

60. “Lessons from the 1929 Crash and the 1930s Debt-Deflation: What Bernanke and King Learned, and What They Could Have Learned,” Conference on Post-Keynesian Principles of , University of Burgundy, Dijon, December 2007.

61. “Galbraith’s Heterodox Teacher: Leo Rogin’s Historical Approach to the Meaning and Validity of Economic Theory” (with Robert H. Koehn), Association for Evolutionary Economics session at Allied Social Science Associations (ASSA) annual meetings, New Orleans, January 2008.

62. “Central Themes in Paul Davidson’s John Maynard Keynes,” Eastern Economic Association, Boston, March 14, 2008.

63. “Trevor Swan and the Neoclassical Growth Model” (with Barbara Spencer), History of Political Economy conference, Duke University, April 2008 (NBER Working Paper 13950, April 2008); HES session at ASSA, San Francisco, January 2009.

64. “James Tobin and Growth Theory” (with Steven Durlauf), History of Political Economy conference, Duke University, April 2008; ERMES, University of Paris II, December 2008; HES session at ASSA, San Francisco, January 2009; University of Burgundy, Dijon, February 2009.

65. “How Marshall Came to Canada” (with Robin F. Neill), Canadian Economics Association, Toronto, May 2009.

66. “Clare de Graffenreid and the Art of Controversy: A Prize-Winning Woman Economist in the Early American Economic Association” (with Geoffrey Black), History of Economics Society, Denver, June 2009; IAFFE/ASE joint session at ASSA, Chicago, January 2012.

67. “‘The Consequences to the Banks of the Collapse of Money Values’, 1931 and 2009,” conference on Perspectives on Keynesian Economics, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beersheba, July 2009.

-34- 68. “Those Who Forget the Past are Condemned to Repeat It: Lessons from Past Financial Crises that were ignored by the Regulations of the Past Fifteen Years” (with Robert H. Koehn), conference on Financial Crisis and Reform, Buffalo State College, October 2009.

69. “Guy Routh’s Heterodox Critique of Economic Methodology” (with Robert H. Koehn), Association for Evolutionary Economics (AFEE) session at ASSA, Atlanta, January 2010.

70. “Tobin as an Econometrician”, History of Political Economy conference on “History of Econometrics,” Duke University, Durham, NC, April 2010, Canadian Economics Association, Quebec City, May 2010, History of Economics Society, Syracuse, NY, June 2010.

71. Lecture on Louis Bachelier, Ohio State University, October 2010, videotaped for “History of Finance” section of American Finance Association website, www.afajof.org/association/historyfinance.asp .

72. “The Genesis of Irving Fisher’s Purchasing Power of Money,” conference on centenary of Fisher’s Purchasing Power of Money, Lyon, October 2011, and Southern Economic Association, Washington, DC, November 2011.

73. “What to Tell a Graduate Macroeconomics Course about Keynes,” conference on Keynes’s General Theory After 75 Years, University of Paris 1 (Pantheon- Sorbonne), December 2011, as plenary address to 1er Congreso Nacional de Investigacion Economica, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City, October 2012, and lunchtime seminar, Center for the History of Political Economy, Duke University, November 2013.

74. “David Hume and Irving Fisher on the Quantity Theory of Money in the Short Run and the Long Run,” conference on Hume and the Scottish Enlightenment after 300 Years, Thomas Guggenheim Program on the History of Economic Thought, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, December 2011; Duke University, February 2012.

75. “Alfred Cowles and Robert Rhea on the Predictability of Stock Prices” (with William Veloce), American Finance Association/History of Economics Society joint session, ASSA, Chicago, January 2012.

76. “‘Perhaps I am a Don Quixote but I am trying to be a Paul Revere’: Irving Fisher as a Public Intellectual,” History of Political Economy conference on “Economists as Public Intellectuals,” Duke University, April 2012.

77. “Irving Fisher’s Appreciation and Interest (1896) and the Fisher Relation” (with Rebeca Gomez Betancourt), Canadian Economics Association, Calgary, June

-35- 2012.

78. “Irving Fisher and Financial Economics,” University of Toronto, September 21, 2012; Ohio State University, September 28, 2012 (filmed for History of Finance section of American Finance Association/Journal of Finance website www.afajof.org/association/historyfinance.asp)

79. “Keynes and Kemmerer on the Gold Exchange Standard” (with Rebeca Gomez Betancourt), History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations (ASSA), San Diego, January 2013

80. Robert Dimand, Terence Hines, Thomas Velk and Olivia Gong, “New Disaggregated Data on Flow of Funds and Economic Activity in the , 1816-1910, from the US Postal System,” American Economic Association poster session at ASSA, San Diego, January 2013

81. “Presidential Address: The Global Economic Crisis in the Light of the History of Interwar Monetary Economics,” History of Economics Society, Vancouver, June 2013

82. “James Tobin and ,” Duke University, November 2013; Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, January 2014; Canadian Economics Association, Vancouver, June 2014; History of Economics Society, Montreal, June 2014. “James Tobin, American Keynesian,” John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Free University of Berlin, May 2014

83. “Hume, Montesquieu and the Origins of the Specie-Flow Mechanism of International Adjustment,” European Society for the History of Economic Thought, University of Rome 3, May 2015

84. “John Maynard Keynes Narrates the : His Reports to the Philips Electronics Firm,” Canadian Economics Association, Ryerson University, May 2015, History of Economics Society, Michigan State University, June 2015, Université de Lyon 2 Lumière, February 2016, Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis, May 2016; British History of Economic Thought Conference, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, September 2016; Hubei University, Wuhan, September 2016; Dalhousie University, September 2016; University of Barcelona, May 2017; Cross-Border Post Keynesian Conference, Buffalo State College, June 2017 (with Bradley Bateman)

85. “Polly Hill: Development Economics on Trial” (with Kojo Saffu), 15th World Congress of Social Economics, Brock University, June 2015

-36- 86. “Women in the Early Years of the American Economic Association, 1885-1945,” American Economic Association/History of Economics Society joint session at Allied Social Science Associations, San Francisco, January 2016 (with Ann Mari May)

87. “Fifty Years of Canadian Economics,” 50th annual meeting of Canadian Economics Association, U. of Ottawa, June 2016

88. “Women Economists in the Middle East and North Africa” (with Talia Yousef), History of Economics Society, Duke University, June 2016

89. “Duelling Presidential Addresses: The Keynesian Response to ’s ‘The Role of Monetary Policy’,” Eastern Economic Association, New York City, February 2017; European Society for the History of Economic Thought, Antwerp, May 2017

90. “Adam Smith on Portuguese Wine and English Cloth,” European Society for the History of Economic Thought, Antwerp, May 2017

91. ----, Thomas Velk, and Mengyue (Rebecca) Zhao, “19th Century US Foreign Trade as Seen from Postal Data,” Canadian Economics Association, Antigonish, NS, June 2017, and Association Française de Cliometrie, Strasbourg, May 14, 2019

92. “William Barber and the History of American Economic Thought,” History of Economics Society, Toronto, June 2017

93. “Expectations in Tobin’s Macroeconomics,” Thomas Guggenheim Conference on the History of Economic Thought, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Be’ersheva, Israel, December 2017

94. Constance André-Aigret and ----, “Populism versus Economic Expertise: J. L. Laughlin debates William (Coin) Harvey,” Association for Social Economics, Allied Social Science Associations, Philadelphia, January 2018

95. “The Fisher Diagram and the Neoclassical Theory of Interest and Capital,” Eastern Economic Association, Boston, March 2018

96. “Irving Fisher on the Stock : Hubris, Nemesis and Analysis,” Canadian Economics Association, McGill University, Montreal, June 2018

97. “Irving Fisher and the Revival of the Quantity Theory of Money,” European Society for the History of Economic Thought, Complutense University, Madrid, June 2018

98. “Changing Economics: Irving Fisher, the Cowles Commission, and the

-37- ,” History of Economics Society, Loyola University of Chicago, June 2018

99. ----- and Christian Walter, “Dickson Leavens on the Diversification of ,” History of Economics Society, Loyola University of Chicago, June 2018

100. “J. Lawrence Laughlin versus Irving Fisher on the Quantity Theory of Money,” 50th annual UK History of Economic Thought Conference, Balliol College, Oxford, August 2018

101. Lola Fowler and ---, “The first 100 years of female economists in sub-Saharan Africa,” History of Economics Society session at ASSA, Atlanta, January 4, 2019

102. “Keynesianism in Canada,” HES session at ASSA, Atlanta, January 4, 2019

103. “Macroeconomic Dynamics at the Cowles Commission from the 1930s to the 1950s,” Association Charles Gide workshop on “Macroeconomics: Dynamic Histories,” Colmar, France, May 18, 2019

104. --- and Harald Hagemann, “Jacob Marschak and the Cowles Approach to the Theory of Money and Assets,” European Society for the History of Economic Thought, Lille, France, May 24, 2019; Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper No. 2196.

105. “The Cowles Commission and Foundation for Research in Economics: Bringing Mathematical Economics and Econometrics from the Fringes of Economics to the Mainstream,” Canadian Economics Association, Banff, June 2, 2019, and History of Economics Society, Columbia University, New York City, June 22, 2019

106. Jasmeen Rahman and ---, “The Emergence of Geographical Economics: At the Boundaries of Economics, Geography and Regional Science,” Association Charles Gide workshop “Evolution of the Disciplinary Boundaries of Economics with the Other Sciences,” TELUQ, Montreal, June 27, 2019

107. --- and Kojo Saffu. “Polly Hill: Crossing and Contesting the Boundaries of Anthropology, Economics, African Studies, and Entrepreneurship Studies,” Association Charles Gide workshop “Evolution of the Disciplinary Boundaries of Economics with the Other Sciences,” TELUQ, Montreal, June 27, 2019

108. “Leon Walras, Irving Fisher and the Cowles Approach to General Equilibrium Analysis,” International Leon Walras Association, Centre Walras-Pareto, University of Lausanne, September 2019.

109. “Irving Fisher, and the Quest for Measurable Marginal ,”

-38- University of Oslo, December 3, 2019 (50th anniversary of Frisch’s Nobel Prize).

110. ---- and Sylvie Rivot, Cowles vs Chicago, History of Economics Society session at Allied Social Science Associations conference, San Diego, January 5, 2020.

111. “ on Economic Science,” Eastern Economic Association, Boston, March 1, 2020, Canadian Economics Association (online), June 2021.

112. “Stephen Leacock on political economy and the unsolved riddle of social justice,” HES session at ASSA, online, January 5, 2021.

113. “Keynes, Knight and Fundamental Uncertainty: A Double Centenary 1921-2021,” Review of Political Economy webinar, February 26, 2021.

Others:

Book Reviews since 1993:

1. Review of A. Asimakopulos, Keynes’s General Theory and Accumulation, History of Political Economy, 25:4, Winter 1993, pp 752-754.

2. Review of F. Targetti, , Economic Journal, 103, November 1993, pp 1571-1573.

3. Review of biographies of Keynes by D. Moggridge and R. Skidelsky, Canadian Journal of Economics, 26, November 1993, pp 993-999.

4. Review article on D. Laidler, The Golden Age of the Quantity Theory, History of Economics Review, 20, Summer 1993, pp 184-189.

5. Review of H. Garretsen, Keynes, Coordination and Beyond, Economic Journal, 104, January 1994, pp 165-167.

6. Review of R.L. Allen, Irving Fisher, Review of Social Economy, 53:2, Summer 1995, pp 290-294.

7. Review of E. Screpanti and S. Zamagni, Outline of the History of Economic Thought, Marshall Studies Bulletin, 4, 1994, pp 60-65.

8. Book note on M. Allais, Les Fondements Comptables de la Macro-Economique, Economic Journal, 105, January 1995, pp 249-250.

9. Review of M. Sebastiani, Kalecki and Unemployment Equilibrium, Economic

-39- Journal, 105, September 1995, pp 1312-1313.

10. Review of J. Davis, Keynes’s Philosophical Development, and P. Mini, John Maynard Keynes, History of Political Economy, 29:2, Summer 1997, pp 364-366.

11. Review of reprint of A. Marshall and M.P. Marshall, Economics of Industry [1879], Review of Social Economy, 56:1, Spring 1998, pp 86-90.

12. Review of P. Graves, Labour Women, Feminist Economics, 4, 1998, pp 148-150.

13. Review of C. McCann, Probability Foundations of Economic Theory, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 8:1, 1998, pp 98-101.

14. Review of J. Nash, Essays on Game Theory, Economic Journal, 109, February 1999, pp F212-F214.

15. Review of J. Henderson, Early Mathematical Economics, History of Political Economy, 31:4, Winter 1999, pp. 777-779.

16. Review of D. Moss, Socializing Security, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 35:1, Winter 1999, pp 81-82.

17. Review of R. Ekelund and R. Hebert, Secret Origins of Microeconomics, History of Political Economy, 33:1, Spring 2001, pp 179-82.

18. - - with R. Koehn, Review of Y. Yonay, The Struggle for the Soul of Economics, European Journal of Political Economy, 16:3, 2000, pp 575-578.

19. Review of P. Groenewegen, ed., Feminism and Political Economy in Victorian England, Feminist Economics, 8:1 (March 2002), pp. 151-153.

20. Review of J. Klein, Statistical Visions in Time, History of Economic Thought Newsletter, 67, Winter 2001, pp. 16-19.

21. Review of P. Howitt, E. de Antoni, and A. Leijonhufvud, eds., Money, Markets and Method: Essays in Honour of Robert Clower, History of Economic Ideas 9:2, 2001, pp. 145-46.

22. Review of J. Toye, Keynes on Population, History of Political Economy, 35:4, Winter 2003, pp. 784-785.

23. with R. Koehn, review of A. Warner, M. Forstater, and S. Rosen, eds., Commitment to Full Employment: The Economics and Social Policy of William S. Vickrey, Review of Political Economy, 2003.

-40- 24. Review of K. Polanyi Levitt, ed., The Life and Work of Karl Polanyi, and of K. McRobbie and K. Polanyi-Levitt, eds., Karl Polanyi in Vienna, Review of Radical Political Economics, 35:1 (Winter 2003), pp. 86-88.

25. Review of Enid Barnett, The Keynesian Arithmetic in War-Time Canada: Development of the 1939-1945, Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology and Medicine, Vol. 25 (cover date 2001, actual publication July 2003), pp. 82-85.

26. Review of Randall Parker, ed., Reflections on the Great Depression, Journal of the History of Economic Thought 26:3 (September 2004), pp. 420-23.

27. Review of Ivo Maes, Economic Thought and the Making of the European Monetary Union, Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology 23-A (2005), pp. 183-86.

28. Review of Thomas Sargent and Francois Velde, The Big Problem of Small Change, History of Economic Ideas, 14:3 (2006), pp. 171-174.

29. Review of J. Courtault and Y. Kabanov, eds., Louis Bachelier, History of Political Economy, 39:2 (Summer 2007), pp. 318-320.

30. Review of D. Rutherford, ed., Biographical Dictionary of British Economists, History of Political Economy, 39:4 (Winter 2007), pp. 750-754.

31. Review of A. Field, Altruistically Inclined? Journal of Socio-Economics, 36:3 (June 2007), pp. 495-501.

32. Review of D. P. O’Brien, The Development of Monetary Economics, EH., June 19, 2008.

33. Review of Randall E. Parker, The Economics of the Great Depression, Review 61:2 (May 2008), pp. 528-529.

34. Review of James Cicarelli and Julianne Cicarelli, Distinguished Women Economists, Feminist Economics 14:3 (July 2008), pp. 164-167.

35. Review of , Fischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance, Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines no. 20 (2009), pp. 196-197.

36. Review of Gordon Fletcher, Dennis Robertson: Essays on his Life and Work, History of Political Economy 41:4 (Winter 2009), pp. 751-752.

37. Review of Wolfgang Hafner and Heinz Zimmermann, eds., Vinzenz Bronzin’s Option Pricing Models, History of Economics Review, No. 53 (Winter 2011 –

-41- i.e. June, winter in Australia), pp. 93-96.

38. Review of Nancy Folbre, Greed, Lust, and Gender: A History of Economic Ideas, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 34:2 (June 2012), pp. 271-274.

39. Review of Daniele Besomi, ed., Crises and Cycles in Economic Dictionaries and Encyclopaedias, History of Political Economy, 46:2 (Summer 2014), pp. 339-341.

40. Review of Toichiro Asada, ed., The Development of Economics in Japan, History of Political Economy, 46:4 (Winter 2014), pp. 696-698.

41. Review of William Coleman, Selwyn Cornish and Alf Hagger, Giblin’s Platoon: The Trials and Triumph of in Australian Public Life, Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Vol. 32 (2014), pp. 351-357.

42. Review of Robert Leeson, ed., Archival Insights into the Evolution of Economics, Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Vol. 32 (2014), pp. 359-363.

43. Review of Walter Friedman, Fortune Tellers: The Story of America’s First Economic Forecasters, History of Political Economy, 47:1 (March 2015), pp. 201- 203.

44. Review of Kiyohiko G. Nishimura and Hiroyuki Ozaki, Economics of Pessimism and Optimism: Theory of Knightian Uncertainty and Its Applications, Journal of Economics (Zeitschrift für Nationaloekonomie), Vol. 124, No. 2 (June 2018), pp. 203-205.

45. Review of Hugh Grant, W. A. Mackintosh: The Life of a Canadian Economist, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 40, No. 3 (September 2018), pp. 441-43.

46. Review of Sheila Dow, Jesper Jespersen and Geoff Tily, eds., The General Theory and Keynes for the 21st Century: Essays in Honour of Victoria Chick, EH.Net, September 27, 2019.

47. Review of Aiko Ikeo, A History of Economic Science in Japan, History of Political Economy, Vol. 52, No. 4 (August 2020), pp. 799-801.

48. Review of Maria Cristina Marcuzzo, Essays in Keynesian Persuasion, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Volume 42, No. 4 (December 2020), pp. 594-596.

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