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Steven G. Medema [8]Steven Medema [1]
  1.  2
    The Economy as a Process of Valuation.Warren J. Samuels, Steven G. Medema & Alfred Allan Schmid - 1997 - Edward Elgar Publishing.
    This text looks at the potential benefits of concept and theory formation along dynamic, evolutionary and valuation for understanding economic processes.
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  2. Disciplinary Collisions : Blum, Kalven, and the Economic Analysis of Accident Law at Chicago in the 1960s.Alain Marciano & Steven Medema - 2019 - In Péter Cserne & Magdalena Małecka (eds.), Law and Economics as Interdisciplinary Exchange: Philosophical, Methodological and Historical Perspectives. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  3.  14
    Economic rebel in retrospect.Steven G. Medema - 2015 - Journal of Economic Methodology 22 (4):517-520.
    Mark Blaug's contributions to economics were many and significant. This essay provides a review of Mark Blaug: Rebel with Many Causes, edited by Marcel Boumans and Matthias Klaes, which collects papers from a set of conferences organized in Blaug's memory.
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  4. From dismal to dominance? : law and economics and the values of imperial science, historically contemplated.Steven G. Medema - 2015 - In Aristides N. Hatzis & Nicholas Mercuro (eds.), Law and economics: philosophical issues and fundamental questions. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  5.  14
    Hanly on Coase: A Comment.Steven G. Medema - 1994 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 11 (1):107-111.
    ABSTRACT Ken Hanly's recent article in this Journal (Vol. 9, No. 1, 1992) takes issue with Ronald Coase's approach to resolving problems of externalities, as set forth in his classic paper ‘The Problem of Social Cost’. I argue that Hanly's discussion of Coase misinterprets or inappropriately rejects certain aspects of Coase's analysis, specifically, with regard to the reciprocal nature of externalities and the economic role of government. The resolution of externality problems is presented as an issue of selective normative choice (...)
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  6.  9
    Historians of Economics and Economic Thought: The Construction of Disciplinary Memory.Steven G. Medema & Warren J. Samuels (eds.) - 2001 - Routledge.
    The history of economic thought has always attracted some of the brightest minds in the discipline. These chroniclers of development have helped form our current views, and it is no surprise that many among them have been at the forefront of new movements in the history of ideas. This notable collection summarizes the work of these key historians of economics and attempts to quantify their impact. Some of the writers covered, such as Friedrich Hayek and Joan Robinson, are already assured (...)
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  7.  6
    The History of Economic Thought: A Reader; Second Edition.Steven G. Medema & Warren J. Samuels - 2013 - Routledge.
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  8.  4
    Economics and the Law, Second Edition: From Posner to Postmodernism and Beyond.Nicholas Mercuro & Steven G. Medema - 2006 - Princeton University Press.
    This is an expanded second edition of Nicholas Mercuro and Steven Medema's influential book Economics and the Law, whose publication in 1998 marked the most comprehensive overview of the various schools of thought in the burgeoning field of Law and Economics. Each of these competing yet complementary traditions has both redefined the study of law and exposed the key economic implications of the legal environment. The book remains true to the scope and aims of the first edition, but also takes (...)
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  9.  31
    Symposium on the Coase Theorem: Legal Fiction: The Place of the Coase Theorem in Law and Economics.Steven G. Medema - 1999 - Economics and Philosophy 15 (2):209-233.
    Modern law and economics received much of its impetus from Ronald Coase's analysis in ‘The Problem of Social Cost,’ and a goodly amount of that comes from the Coase theorem, which states that, absent transaction costs, externalities will be efficiently resolved through bargaining. The fact that the analysis that came to be codified in the Coase theorem was an exercise in pure fiction on Coase's part did not deter the erection of a substantial edifice of positive and normative analysis on (...)
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