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Don Lavoie
Don Lavoie | |||||
économiste | |||||
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Dates | 1951 - 2001 | ||||
Tendance | école autrichienne | ||||
Nationalité | {{{nationalité}}} | ||||
Articles internes | Autres articles sur Don Lavoie | ||||
Citation | |||||
Interwikis sur Don Lavoie | |||||
Don Lavoie (4 avril 1951 - 6 novembre 2001) était un économiste de l'école autrichienne d'économie. Il travailla au Cato Institute. Il a écrit un livre remarquable sur le calcul économique en économie socialiste, intitulé National Economic Planning: What Is Left? (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ballinger Publishing Company, 1985). Son parcours intellectuel est influencé par Friedrich Hayek, Michael Polanyi et Ludwig Lachmann.
Parmi ses étudiants, il y a de nombreux économistes de l'école autrichienne : Peter Boettke, David Prychitko, Steve Horwitz, Ralph Rector, Emily Chamlee-Wright, Howie Baetjer et Virgil Storr.
En 1982, il est le rédacteur en chef de la revue "Austrian Economics Newsletter". Il apparaît dans l'ours du volume 3. Il est accompagné comme directeur adjoint par Tyler Cowen. Dans le bureau éditorial, on aperçoit Walter Block, Richard Ebeling, Richard Fink, John Kunze, Gerald O'Driscoll, Mario Rizzo, Joseph Salerno et Gary Short. La revue emploie plusieurs étudiants : Fernando Alvarez, Don Boudreaux, Sharon Gifford, Sanford Ikeda, Roger Koppl et Josh Zissman. Don Lavoie fut le co-fondateur d'un centre interdisciplinaire connu sous le nom de Programme d'apprentissage social et organisationnel (Program on Social & Organizational Learning).
En tant que chercheur, il étudia la philosophie des sciences sociales (spécialement l'application de l'herméneutique à la science économique) et les systèmes économiques comparatifs (spécialement les théories marxiennes du socialisme).
A la fin de sa carrière, achevée trop tôt par la maladie, il travailla sur la philosophie et la pratique du discours au travers de la médiation électronique. Il avait compris l'importance pour les organisations d'adopter de nouvelles façons de cultiver des environnements d'apprentissage interactifs (groupe de travail, hypertexte, logiciels de communication)] afin d'améliorer les processus communicatifs. Il montra la nature fondamentale des processus d'apprentissages sociaux, que ce soit dans les échanges de marché (conversations verbales) ou dans les dialogues basés sur l'hypertexte.
Dans le livre Culture and Enterprise: The Development, Representation and Morality of Business écrit avec Emily Chamlee-Wright, ils prennent en compte l'importance du rôle de la culture dans le développement économique d'une nation.
Bibliographie
- 1977, "From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Mises,", Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol, 1, #4, pp 323-336
- 1977, Austrian Economics at New York University, Austrian Economics Newsletter, 1
- 1978, Shackle: a critical sampling, Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol. 2. No. 2. pp125-134
- 1978, "The Relevance of the Subjective,", Reason Papers, 4 pp. 95-101
- 1978, Austrian Economics Seminar: Part II: 1976–77, Austrian Economics Newsletter, 1 (Fall)
- 1979, "Austrian Economic Seminar" [Parts I-IV, 1975-9], Austrian Economics Newsletter Spring 1978 - Fall
- 1981, Introduction : an economic critique of socialism, Journal of libertarian studies, vol V, n1, winter, pp1-6
- 1981, A critique of the standard account of the socialist calculation debate, Journal of libertarian studies, vol V, n1, winter, pp41-88
- - Traduit en japonais par Takeshi Hinata in Journal of Management Information Science #4, Feb 1998, pp161-98
- 1981, Mises, the Calculation Debate, and Market Socialism Wirtschaftspolitische Bltter, 4,
- 1982, The market as a procedure for discovery and conveyance of inarticulate knowledge, Working paper, Center for the study of market processes, George Mason University
- - repris en 1995, In: David Prychitko, ed., Individuals, Institutions, Interpretations: Hermeneutics Applied to Economics. Brookfield, VT: Avebury, pp115-37
- 1982, The development of the Misesian theory of interventionism, In Kirzner I ed, Method process and Austrian economics, Essays in Honor of Ludwig von Mises, Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, ch 14, pp169-184
- 1983, Economic Calculation and Monetary Stability, Cato Journal, 3, #1 Spring
- 1983, “Some Strengths in Marx’s Disequilibrium Theory of Money”, Cambridge Journal of Economics, vol.7, pp.55-58
- 1984, commentaire du livre de Terence W. Hutchison The Politics and Philosophy of Economics: Marxians, Keynesians and Austrians, Market Process, 2, #1 (Winter)
- 1984, "Two Varieties of Industrial Policy: A Critique", Cato Journal, 4, #2 (Fall)
- 1985, The interpretive dimension of economics : science, hermeneutics and praxeology, Center for the study of market processes, working papers series 15, department of economics, George Mason University
- 1985, commentaire sur le livre : On Rebuilding America d'Alperovitz et Faux, Comparative Economic Studies, 21, #3, (Fall)
- 1985, Rivalry and central planning. The socialist calculation debate reconsidered, Cambridge University Press
- 1985, National Economic Planning : What is left ?, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ballinger Publishing Company
- - réimprimé en 1986, Fairfax Va : Institute for Humane Studies, George Mason University
- 1985, Tacit knowledge and the revolution in the philosophy of science, In National Economic Planning : What is left ?, Cambridge, Mass : Ballinger, pp247-265
- 1986, The market as a procedure for discovery and conveyance of inarticulate knowledge, Comparative Economics studies, vol 28, spring, pp1-19
- - Repris en 1991 In Friedrich A. Hayek. Critical assessments, John C. Wood and Ronald N. Woods, vol 4, London and New York, Routledge 1991, ch 87, pp213-233
- 1986, Euclidianism versus hermeneutics : A Reinterpretation of Misesian A priorism , in Kirzner I. (ed.), Subjectivism, Intelligibility and Economic Understanding, London: Macmillan, ch.14, pp.192-210.
- - Repris en 1990, In Austrian Economics, vol 1, Stephen Littlechild, Edward Elgar, pp508-526
- 1986 , commentaire sur le livre de C. B. Macphersons, The Rise and Fall of Economic Justice and Other Papers, Journal of Comparative Economics, 10 (June 1986), pp195-7
- 1986, "Between Institutionalism and Formalism: The Rise and Fall of the Austrian School's Calculation Argument, 1920-1950," Center for the Study of Market Processes Working Paper #21
- 1986, "Political and Economic Illusions of Socialism,", Critical Review, 1, #1, (Winter 1986-7), pp1-35
- 1987, "Reply to Mueller," Critical Review, 1, #2, (Spring 1987), pp78-82
- 1987, The accounting of interpretation and the interpretation of accounts : the Communicative function of 'the language of business', Accounting, organizations and society, vol 12, n6, pp579-604
- - Repris en 1989, In Orace Johnson (ed.) Methodology And Accounting Research: Does the Past Have a Future?, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 1989 {proceedings of the 8th Annual Big Ten Accounting Consortium, University of Illinois, May 6-8, 1987}
- 1987, "Polanyi's Critique of Objectivity," Critical Review, 1, #3, (Summer), pp109-116
- 1988, Introductory notes, Market Process, George Mason University, spring
- 1988, "A Political Philosophy for the Market Process" Market Process, 6, #2 (Fall 1988).
- 1989. “Economic Chaos or Spontaneous Order? Implications for Political Economy of the New View of Science.” Cato Journal 8: 613–35
- - Repris en 1990, In Dorn,-James-A.; Wang,-Xi, eds. Economic reform in China: Problems and prospects. A Cato Institute Book, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1990, pages 63-86
- 1989, "Economic Regulation: Theory and History," Market Process, 7, #1 (Spring) pp. 22-5
- 1989, avec Hugo De Garis, "Evolution of the Money Concept: A computational Model," manuscrit non publié, George Mason University.
- 1990, ‘Prefatory Note: The Origins of “The Agorics Project”’, Market Process, v8, Spring, pp. 116-119
- 1990, Introduction, Special issue on "F.A. Hayeks Theory of Cultural Evolution", Cultural Dynamics, 3, #1.
- 1990, Hermeneutics, subjectivity, and the Lester/Machlup debate : toward a more anthropoligical approach to empirical economics, In Warren Samuels, ed, Economics as discourse, Boston : Kluwer Academic Publishing
- 1990, Understanding differently - hermeneutics and the spontaneous order of communication processes, History of Political Economy Annual Supplement to Vol. 22, pp. 359-77, (Carl Menger and his legacy in economics), pp359-377
- 1990, avec Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, National defence and the public goods problem, In Robert Higgs, ed, Arms, politics, and the economy : historical and contemporary perspectives, New York : Holmes and Meier
- 1990, Computation, incentives, and discovery : the cognitive function of markets in market-socialism, in J. S. Prybyla (ed.), Privatising and Marketising Socialism, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 507, January, pp72-79
- 1990, avec Howard Baetjer et Bill Tulloh, High-tech hayekians : some possible research topics in the economics of computation, Market process, 8(1), spring, pp120-148
- - Repris en 2004, In: Jack Birner et Pierre Garrouste, Markets, Information, and Communication: An Austrian Perspective on the Internet Economy, New York, US et London, UK: Routledge, pp. 91-120
- 1990, Commentaire sur le livre d'Henry K. H. Woos Whats Wrong With Formalization in Economics? An Epistemological Critique for Research, History of Economic Thought and Methodology, 7: 274-81
- 1991, avec Howard Baetjer et Bill Tulloh, "Coping With Complexity: OOPS and the Economists Critique of Central Planning," Hotline on Object-Oriented Technology November, 3 (1), November, pp. 6-8
- 1991, ed, Hermeneutics and economics, London : Routledge and Kegan Paul
- 1991, ‘The Discovery and Interpretation of Profit Opportunities: Culture and the Kirznerian Entrepreneur’, in Brigitte Berger, (ed) The Culture of Entrepreneurship. San Francisco: Institute for Contemporary Studies, pp. 33-51
- 1991, ‘Order in Complex Systems: Object-Oriented Programming and the Economists’ Critique of Central Planning’, manuscrit non publié
- 1993, avec Howard Baetjer, Bill Tulloh et Richard Langlois, Component Software: A Market Perspective on the Coming Revolution in Software, Patricia Seybold Group Special Research Report, Strategic Technologies Series.
- 1994, ed, Expectations and the Meaning of Institutions : Ludwig M. Lachmann. New York : Routledge
- 1994, ‘Preface: The Meaning of Market Process’, In: Peter Boettke et David Prychitko, (eds), The Market Process: Essays in Contemporary Austrian Economics, Brookfield US et Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, pp. ix-xii
- 1994, “The Interpretive Turn.” In The Elgar Companion to Austrian Economics, Peter J. Boettke, ed., Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar
- 2000, avec Roman Kulchitsky, Hypertext Systems, Hypertext Computing and Case Study Research. APSA Annual Meeting, Washington D.C.
- 2000, avec Emily Chamlee-Wright, Culture and Enterprise: The Development, Representation and Morality of Business, London, New York: Routledge
- 2003, ‘Subjectivism, Entrepreneurship, and the Convergence of Groupware and Hypertext,’ In: Jack Birner et Pierre Garrouste, eds., Markets, Information, and Communication: An Austrian Perspective on the Internet Economy, New York, US et London, UK: Routledge, pp. 21-46
Liens externes
- Bibliography of Don Lavoie (en)
- 'Don Lavoie: A truth-teller now silent' By RONALD N. NEFF (en)
- Don Lavoie Online (en)
- Remembering Don Lavoie (1951-2001): A Student's Perspective� (en)
- New” Collaborative Learning Environments : The Convergence of Hermeneutics and Hypertext by Virgil Henry Storr (en)
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