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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Les physiocrates et les gueux ou la position des premiers économistes sur la question de la pauvreté en France, (1756--1789)

Duchesne, Sébastien January 2003 (has links)
En dépit d'une sensible amélioration des conditions de vie économiques et matérielles et malgré l'optimisme véhicule par l'esprit des Lumières, la pauvreté demeurait, dans les dernières décennies de la France d'Ancien Régime, un problème endémique et préoccupant. Convaincus que la France était touchée par un processus d'appauvrissement général, les intellectuels des Lumières demeurerent, tout au cours de la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle, extrêmement préoccupés par les questions liées à la pauvreté. Parmi la multitude d'intellectuels et de philosophes qui allèrent se prononcer sur les origines et les remèdes à adopter face aux problèmes de la mendicité et du vagabondage, les Physiocrates, qu'on considère à juste titre comme étant les premiers économistes français, furent également les premiers à proposer un ensemble de programmes cohérents et structures visant à éradiquer l'extrême pauvreté du royaume de France. Bien que les traités sur la pauvreté rédigés par Guillaume-François Le Trosne, Nicolas Baudeau et Pierre-Samuel Du Pont de Nemours reprirent, dans l'ensemble, les idées et les solutions avancées par les philosophes des Lumières, l'originalité de leurs démarches reposait sur l'édification de programmes pouvant être directement utilisés par les administrateurs du royaume.
42

The Development of the Theory of Economic Law Prior to Classical Economics

Pearson, John E. 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the origin and development of economic law. In doing this we may better determine whether our present theory of economic law is an element of scientific data or whether it merely leads to confusion and inconsistency. The purpose of this thesis is to see from where our ideas came, in the belief that confusion in a society is the result of the failure of ideas to correspond with reality.
43

Erwin Paul Dieseldorff, German entrepreneur in the Alta Verapaz of Guatemala, 1889-1937

January 1970 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
44

Foreign private long-term investment in Italy: 1956-1961, its causes and contributions to Italy's economic growth

January 1965 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
45

Financial institutions and economic development in Mississippi, 1809 to 1860

January 1969 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
46

The role of subjectivity in the determination of the value of money in British economic thought prior to the marginal revolution

January 1974 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
47

Antebellum sugar and rice plantations, Louisiana and South Carolina: a profitability study

January 1970 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
48

Industry and trade policy: A case study of stagnation in Nigeria

Agard, Beverlye C. January 1990 (has links)
The adoption of import oriented policies introduced distortions into the economy which caused Nigeria to ignore resource-based industry in agriculture, petroleum and metal production. The resulted in the transfer of technology into industries with a continual reliance on imported inputs. This pattern of production represented a drain on foreign exchange and was opposed to the initial assumption that import substituting industry would save foreign exchange. These policies introduced an anti-export bias and an anti-employment bias into the economy as the price of capital was kept artificially low which penalized the agriculture sector by adversely affecting the terms of trade enjoyed by the producers of agricultural commodities. Nigeria's implementation of policies that created disincentives to efficiently allocate resources was the initial cause of stagnation. However, the implementation of policies which created disincentives to expand production in agriculture and crude oil exports continued stagnation.
49

Predatory pricing in Canada : historical, economic and legal aspects in the light of recent developments in the United States

Jakubowski, Rainer. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
50

The Modern Stage of Capitalism: The Drama of Markets and Money (1870-1930)

Sniderman, Alisa 01 May 2017 (has links)
The Modern Stage of Capitalism tells the story of why and how modern drama captured the spirit of capitalism in all its contradictions. Although the bourgeois novel has long been considered the definitive genre of capital, at the end of the nineteenth century, Western theatre was in the perfect position to explore the ambiguous impact of capitalist culture. It was at the zenith of the economic hierarchy of the arts and at the nadir of the aesthetic hierarchy. Even with the serious drama of the day, modern theatre could not entirely purge itself of the tarnish of commerce. This enmeshment in commerce and the market economy generated a wealth of formal innovations and a wide range of responses to capitalist culture that went beyond moral outrage. Dramatists from Ibsen and Shaw to Brecht and O’Neill were neither apologists for, nor mere detractors of capitalism; they explored the bonds and clashes between religious values and secular economic virtues, drawing parallels between the institution of theatre and the brave new world of capitalist modernity. Besides dramatic texts, this interdisciplinary project relies on archival research of theatre productions, socio-economic theories that the playwrights responded to (Smith, Marx, Weber, Morris, Taylor), and critical theory that examines the relationship between economics and literary studies (Bourdieu, Jameson, Moretti). The present study takes modern theatre as a case study to show that products of culture engage with capitalism in a network of both promotional and antagonistic relations. The modern stage became a testing ground for the ideas of capitalist culture including the work ethic, competition, and the accumulation of capital. / Comparative Literature

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