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Mercantilism: 2 Volumes

Routledge (1994)

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  1. Imperialism and Capitalist Development in Marx’s Capital.Lucia Pradella - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (2):117-147.
    This article aims at contributing to current debates on the ‘new imperialism’ by presenting the main results of a reading of Marx’sCapitalin light of his writings on colonialism, which were unknown in the early Marxist debate on imperialism. It aims to prove that, in his main work, Marx does not analyse a national economy or – correspondingly – an abstract model of capitalist society, but a world-polarising and ever-expanding system. This abstraction allows the identification of the laws of development of (...)
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  • Los impactos demográficos del modelo agroexportador en Argentina.Fernando Ariel Manzano & Guillermo Ángel Velázquez - 2021 - Astrolabio: Nueva Época 26:44-77.
    Tras la llegada de los conquistadores españoles y durante los dos siglos del reinado de su monopolio, no se permitió el ingreso de extranjeros y la población permaneció distribuida en las regiones, en proporciones casi inversas a las actuales. Con la caída del régimen español y los avances del monopolio inglés, comenzó a desplazarse el centro territorial argentino desde el Noroeste hacia el Litoral y a producirse variaciones en la dinámica demográfica. El establecimiento del modelo agroexportador produjo una afluencia excepcional (...)
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  • The survival of Aristotelianism in early English mercantilism: an illustration from the debate between Malynes and Misselden.Joost W. Hengstmengel - 2017 - Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 10 (1):64-82.
    Handbooks of the history of economic thought typically assume a strict fault line between scholastic economics and mercantilism. Historically, the distinction between the two streams of thought was less evident—especially when it came to the style of argumentation, in which there is much continuity between the scholastic doctors and early mercantilists. However, although the latter did not employ the scholastic method, both traditions frequently called upon classical authorities to strengthen their arguments. What is striking is the high regard for Aristotle (...)
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  • Moral supervision and autonomous social order: wages and consumption in 18th-century economic thought.Ann Firth - 2002 - History of the Human Sciences 15 (1):39-57.
    Political oeconomy in the 18th century operated in the absence of the conception of an autonomous social order articulated in the later concepts of `the economy' and `society'. Without a self-sustaining mechanism oriented to stability and endogenous economic growth, national prosperity and social order were assumed to depend upon the detailed interventions in economic life that are characteristic of mercantilism and the police of the poor. Smith's theory that autonomous economic growth underpinned a stable order of social interdependencies based upon (...)
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  • 'To methodize and regulate them': William Petty's governmental science of statistics.Juri Mykkänen - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (3):65-88.
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