Top Posts of 2013
31 December 2013 at 7:55 am Peter G. Klein 1 comment
| Peter Klein |
It’s been another fine year at O&M. 2013 witnessed 129 new posts, 197,531 page views, and 114,921 unique visitors. Here are the most popular posts published in 2013. Read them again for entertainment and enlightenment!
- Rise of the Three-Essays Dissertation
- Ronald Coase (1910-2013)
- Sequestration and the Death of Mainstream Journalism
- Post AoM: Are Management Types Too Spoiled?
- Nobel Miscellany
- The Myth of the Flattening Hierarchy
- Climate Science and the Scientific Method
- Bulletin: Brian Arthur Has Just Invented Austrian Economics
- Solution to the Economic Crisis? More Keynes and Marx
- Armen Alchian (1914-2013)
- My Response to Shane (2012)
- Your Favorite Books, in One Sentence
- Does Boeing Have an Outsourcing Problem?
- Doug Allen on Alchian
- New Paper on Austrian Capital Theory
- Hard and Soft Obscurantism
- Mokyr on Cultural Entrepreneurship
- Microfoundations Conference in Copenhagen, June 13-15, 2014
- On Academic Writing
- Steven Klepper
- Entrepreneurship and Knowledge
- Easy Money and Asset Bubbles
- Blind Review Blindly Reviewing Itself
- Reflections on the Explanation of Heterogeneous Firm Capability
- Do Markets “React” to Economic News?
Thanks to all of you for your patronage, commentary, and support!
Entry filed under: - Klein -, Austrian Economics, Business/Economic History, Entrepreneurship, Financial Markets, History of Economic and Management Thought, Management Theory, New Institutional Economics, People, Recommended Reading, Strategic Management.
1.
PA | 1 January 2014 at 9:52 pm
Flattening hierarchy continues to be a very important research question. The media has begun to direct a lot of attention to Holacracy given it’s recent proponents Zappos and Medium. My review of concept suggests that it is very consistent with what is articulated by Wolf and the management literature. I sustepct when and where this concept applies must be developed more thoughtfully. Many of its proponents sound like sages.