I am teaching two courses this term --- Econ 880 -- Austrian Theory of the Market Process I --- and HNR 131 -- Contemporary Society in Multiple Perspectives.
You can read the syllabi here.
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Peter J. Boettke: Living Economics: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
Christopher Coyne: Doing Bad by Doing Good: Why Humanitarian Action Fails
Paul Heyne, Peter Boettke, David Prychitko: Economic Way of Thinking, The (12th Edition)
Steven Horwitz: Microfoundations and Macroeconomics: An Austrian Perspective
Boettke & Aligica: Challenging Institutional Analysis and Development: The Bloomington School
Peter T. Leeson: The Invisible Hook: The Hidden Economics of Pirates
Philippe Lacoude and Frederic Sautet (Eds.): Action ou Taxation
Peter Boettke: The Political Economy of Soviet Socialism: the Formative Years, 1918-1928
Peter Boettke: Calculation and Coordination: Essays on Socialism and Transitional Political Economy
Peter Boettke & Peter Leeson (Eds.): The Legacy of Ludwig Von Mises
Peter Boettke: Why Perestroika Failed: The Politics and Economics of Socialist Transformation
Peter Boettke (Ed.): The Elgar Companion to Austrian Economics
Maybe I should transfer to GMU in order to get a full dosage of Austrian ideas. Each time I look at one of your syllabi Dr. B., I see that your students will be discussing readings that I have read (or ones that I did not know about, and want to need to read)!
Posted by: Brian Pitt | August 27, 2008 at 04:48 PM
Thanks for the course information. Helps me in my own Austrian Economics Education here at home. :)
Unfortunatly my home country - Belgium - doesn't have any courses on Austrian Economy, so we are required to do it with MES, HA & the others.
Posted by: Lode Cossaer | August 27, 2008 at 05:26 PM
(Pete, email me at your earliest opportunity!)
Posted by: DPrychitko | August 28, 2008 at 06:59 AM
Yes, the Austrian class looks very exciting. The topics look really great.
Do students usually write publishable papers in your class? Here is a suggestion: Why not put up the three best student papers on this blog for all of us to read? I would really like to see what your students are writing about on Austrian Economics. I am curious because this is an excellent syllabus.
Posted by: matthew mueller | August 28, 2008 at 09:51 PM
Matt,
Great idea. The sample over the past 5 years would include the following:
Ed Stringham's paper on Hicks-Kaldor
Ben Powell on Japanese boom-bust
Virgil Storr on the embeddedness of markets in culture
Scott Beaulier on the resource curse and Botswana's economic 'miracle'
Chris Coyne on post-war reconstruction
Peter Leeson on the problem of social heterogeneity
Anthony Evans on the spread of market oriented ideas in Eastern Europe
Steve Miller on the economics of education and heurisitcs
Dan D'Amico on law and order in Ancient Athens
Now keep in mind that my class historically has been the Austrian II course, rather than this more foundational course. I am hoping that students in this class will work on more "pure" Austrian topics, such as imputation theory, capital theory, methodology, monetary theory, etc.
Anyway, I hope the students this year work hard and tackle tough questions in the Austrian tradition.
Pete
Posted by: Peter Boettke | August 28, 2008 at 10:41 PM
The idea to discuss economic theory starting from novels is interesting. I would have chosen more challenging and influential literary works, however, like - for instance - Kafka's (unfinished) "America" for a discussion on homo economics, Proust's "In Search of the Lost Time" or Joyce's "Ulyses" for an interesting discussion regarding time and subjective value, Swift's "Gulliver's Travels" might serve well for a funny discussion on trade and Balzac's Father Goriot for discussing...savings? - I wonder how would such class might be like...In any case, I think the literature students would greatly appreciate it.
Posted by: Bogdan Enache | August 28, 2008 at 11:15 PM