Notes from the Schumpeter Society Conference
5 July 2008 at 4:28 pm Dick Langlois Leave a comment
| Dick Langlois |
I’m in Rio De Janeiro, where the biennial conference of the International Joseph A. Schumpeter Society has just finished up. I was involved in, among other things, a plenary session on the first day with Dick Nelson and Carliss Baldwin on “Varieties of Knowledge in the Economy.” The session was organized by Peter Murmann, who promises to post the slides and notes eventually on his very interesting website.
At the conference banquet last night — in the elegant Copacabana Palace Hotel — the Schumpeter Prize was split among three recipients. One was Tom McCraw for Prophet of Innovation, his biography of Schumpeter, which Peter blogged about some time ago. (See also my review.) Another was Martin Fransman for The New ICT Ecosystem: Implications for Europe, the latest of Martin’s many interesting books on ICT industry structure and government policy. In his acceptance remarks, Martin mentioned the picture of Schumpeter that had adorned the office wall of his first (and perhaps most influential) economics teacher, Ludwig Lachmann, at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa. The third recipient(s) were Mario Amendola and Jean-Luc Gaffard for a book I’ve have not yet seen.
The conference was set in a beautiful part of Rio called Urca, right on the water and surrounded by giant jutting granite hills. The area houses not only some older parts of the Federal University of Rio but also a compound of military facilities and academies. There is also an edifice called the Instituto Benjamin Constant, a school for the blind, which is apparently not named, however, for the eighteenth-century Swiss liberal thinker but for a nineteenth-century army officer who was the leading Brazilian adherent to the positivism of Auguste Comte.
Entry filed under: - Langlois -, Conferences, Evolutionary Economics.









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