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This handbook provides an overview of current trends and issues in the rapidly developing field of evolutionary economics, an approach which emphasises the levels of the micro (e.g. firms and households), meso (e.g. industries and institutions), and macro (e.g. economic policy, structure and growth).
List of contents
Introduction: Evolutionary economics: A navigational guide
PART I Foundational issues and theoretical domains 1 Joseph A. Schumpeter: One of the founders of evolutionary economics
2 Thorstein Bunde Veblen: A founder of evolutionary economics 3 The foundational evolutionary traverse of Richard R. Nelson and Sidney G. Winter 4 F. A. Hayek and evolutionary Austrian economics 5 Kenneth Boulding's contribution to evolutionary economics 6 Evolutionary economics and psychology: Where we are, where we could go 7 Evolutionary cultural science 8 Evolutionary economics and economic history 9 Why an evolutionary economic geography? The spatial economy as a complex evolving system 10 Darwin's ideas and their mixed reception in evolutionary economics 11 Computational evolutionary economics: Minimal principle and minimum intelligence 12 Evolutionary modelling and the rule-based approach 13 Contingency in evolutionary economics: Causality and comparative analysis Marco Lehmann-Waffenschmidt 14 The firm as an experimental decision maker 15 Evolutionary economics, routines, and dynamic capabilities
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Routines 17 Organizational routines 18 Memes 19 The path dependence of knowledge and innovation 20
Evolutionary consumer theory 21 Evolutionary price theory 22 The coevolution of innovation and demand
PART II Evolutionary economic policy and political economy 23 Evolutionary economic policy and competitiveness 24 Smart specialisation 25 Evolutionary economic geography and policy 26 Global knowledge embeddedness 27 Macro-evolutionary modelling of climate policies
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The visible hand of innovation policy 29 Generalized rules, Nelson-Winter routines, and Ostrom rules 30 Democracy as an evolutionary process 31 Public entrepreneurship in economic evolution 32 Evolutionary political economy 33 Division of labor as co-evolutionary process of ecology, technology, culture, organization, and knowledge 34 Evolutionary economics and LDCs: An African perspective 35 Globalization and its governance in an evolutionary perspective
About the author
Kurt Dopfer is Professor Emeritus at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland.
Richard R. Nelson is Professor Emeritus at Columbia University, New York, USA.
Jason Potts is Professor at RMIT, Melbourne, Australia.
Andreas Pyka is Professor at University Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany.