Prindi
papers
Full texts are also available in repec (http://www.repec.org)
2006
Paper no. 1
Erik S. Reinert, Evolutionary Economics, Classical Development Economics, and the History of Economic Policy: A Plea for Theorizing by Inclusion.
Paper no. 2
Richard R. Nelson, Economic Development from the Perspective of Evolutionary Economic Theory.
Paper no. 3
Erik S. Reinert, Development and Social Goals: Balancing Aid and Development to Prevent ‘Welfare Colonialism’.
Paper no. 4
Jan Kregel and Leonardo Burlamaqui, Finance, Competition, Instability, and Development Microfoundations and Financial Scaffolding of the Economy.
Paper no. 5
Erik S. Reinert, European Integration, Innovations and Uneven Economic Growth: Challenges and Problems of EU 2005
Paper no. 6
Leonardo Burlamaqui, How Should Competition Policies and Intellectual Property Issues Interact in a Globalised World? A Schumpeterian Perspective
Paper no. 7
Paolo Crestanello and Giuseppe Tattara, Connections and Competences in the Governance of the Value Chain. How Industrial Countries Keep their Competitive Power.
Paper no. 8
Sophus A. Reinert, Darwin and the Body Politic: Schaffle, Veblen, and the Shift of Biological Metaphor in Economics
Paper no. 9
Antonio Serra, BREVE TRATTATO DELLE CAUSE
2007
Paper no. 10
Joseph L. Love, The Latin American Contribution to Center-Periphery Perspectives: History and Prospect
Paper no. 11
Ronald Dore, Shareholder capitalism comes to Japan
Paper no. 12
Per Högselius, Learning to Destroy: Case studies of creative destruction
management in the new Europe
Paper no. 13
Gabriel Yoguel, Analia Erbes, Veronica Robert, and Jose Borello, Diffusion and appropriation of knowledge in different organizational structures
Paper no. 14
Erik S. Reinert, Rainer Kattel, European Eastern Enlargement as Europe's Attempted Economic Suicide?
Paper no. 15
Carlota Perez, Great Surges of development and alternative forms of globalization
2008
Paper no. 16
Erik S. Reinert, Iulie Aslaksen, Inger Marie G. Eira, Svein Mathiesen, Hugo Reinert & Ellen Inga Turi, Adapting to Climate Change in Reindeer Herding: The Nation-State as Problem and Solution
Paper no. 17
Lawrence King, Patrick Hamm, The Governance Grenade: Mass Privatization, State Capacity and Economic Development in Postcommunist and Reforming Communist Societies
2009
Paper no. 18
Erik S. Reinert, Rainer Kattel, The Economics of Failed, Failing, and Fragile States: Productive Structure as the Missing Link
Paper no. 19
Carlota Perez, The New Technologies: An Integrated View, July, 1986
Paper no. 20
Carlota Perez, Technological revolutions and techno-economic paradigms
Paper no. 21
Rainer Kattel, Jan A. Kregel, Erik S. Reinert, The Relevance of Ragnar Nurkse and Classical Development Economics
Paper no. 22
Erik S. Reinert, Financial Crises, Persistent Poverty, and the Terrible Simplifiers in Economics: A Turning Point Towards a New ‘1848 Moment’
Paper no. 23
Rainer Kattel, Erik S. Reinert and Margit Suurna, Industrial Restructuring and Innovation Policy in Central and Eastern Europe since 1990
Paper no. 24
Erkki Karo, Rainer Kattel, The Copying Paradox: Why Converging Policies but Diverging Capacities for Development in Eastern European Innovation Systems?
Paper no. 25
Erik S. Reinert, Emulation versus Comparative Advantage: Competing and Complementary Principles in the History of Economic Policy
Paper no. 26
Erik S. Reinert, Capitalist Dynamics: A Technical Note
2010
Paper no. 27
Martin Doornbos, Failing States or Failing Models?: Accounting for the Incidence of State Collapse
Paper no. 28
Carlota Perez, The Financial Crisis and the Future of Innovation: A View of Technical Change with the Aid of History
Paper no. 29
Rainer Kattel, Annalisa Primi, The periphery paradox in innovation policy: Latin America and Eastern Europe Compared. Some reflections on why it is not enough to say that innovation matters for development.
Paper no. 30
Erkki Karo, Rainer Kattel, Is 'Open Innovation' Re-Inventing Innovation Policy for Catching-up Economies?
Paper no. 31
Rainer Kattel, Veiko Lember, Public procurement as an industrial policy tool an option for developing countries?