Imagens das páginas
PDF
ePub

from 9 per cent in 1911 to 13 per cent in 1913. This department contained, in 1913, 42 signed communications.

Although the total space devoted to periodical abstracts has declined, the number of titles entered has increased. In 1913 there were 1877 titles, as compared with 1727 in 1912. In part the reduction in space is due to the loss of services of abstractors, so that for certain topics the entries were made without annotation. Here note should be made of the cordial coöperation of the members who have charge of the different topics for abstract. This task is by no means a pleasant one. Often it must be done under great pressure and inconvenience, and it is a routine service offering little opportunity for expression of individual judgment. During the past year the Review has lost in this connection the services of Professor W. F. Gephart who had charge of Insurance, of Professor F. R. Fairchild in charge of Money, Banking, Credit, and Prices, and of Professor H. S. Person in charge of Commerce. For the latter group Dr. Melvin T. Copeland of Harvard University has kindly agreed to assume responsibility; for Money, Credit, and Banking, Professor D. C. Barrett of Haverford College; and, for Prices, Dr. H. J. Harris of the Library of Congress.

Some statement should be made in regard to the policy of the editors. An endeavor has been made to draw into the circle of contributors as large a number of our members as possible. For some of the work it is necessary to have a permanent staff of helpers, as in the preparation of the periodical abstracts, and, to a less extent, of the legislative notes. But the group of reviewers is constantly extending. During the first two years there were 175 different reviewers, and, during this third year, 51 new names were added, making a total of 226. In thus aiming to secure a wide representative expression of the judgement of our membership, guard has been taken against relying upon immature experience or unscholarly aid. There have been 48 different authors of 58 leading articles during the three years. This also indicates an effort to extend the hospitality of the Review to as large a circle as possible.

DAVIS R. DEWEY,
Managing Editor.

FIRST SERIES

Any volume in paper, $4.00; in cloth, $5.00 for a single volume, $4.00 for each additional volume ordered at the same time. Vol. XI, in paper, $2.00; in cloth, $2.50.

Set of 11 volumes in cloth, with index, $41.00.

* Numbers starred are sold only with the set; but those double starred can be obtained in revised edition. For information apply to the Secretary.

Volume I, 1886

1. Report of Organization of the American Economic Association. 2-3. *Relation of the Modern Municipality to the Gas Supply. James. Pp. 66

Price in paper

Pp. 46. $.50

By E. J.

.75

.75

.75

4. Coöperation in a Western City. By Albert Shaw. Pp. 106. Coöperation in New England. By E. W. Bemis. Pp. 136. *Relation of the State to Industrial Action. By H. C. Adams. Pp. 85. .75

5.

Volume II, 1887

1. Three Phases of Coöperation in the West. By Amos G. Warner. Pp. 119. .75 2. Historical Sketch of the Finances of Pennsylvania. By T. K. Worthington. Pp. 106.

3. The Railway Question. By Edmund J. James. Pp. 68.

4.

.75

.75

.75

By H. C.

Early History of the English Woolen Industry. By W. J. Ashley. Pp. 85. 5. Mediaeval Guilds of England. By E. R. A. Seligman. Pp. 113. 6. Relation of Modern Municipalities to Quasi-Public Works. Adams and others. Pp. 87.

[ocr errors]

.75

Volume III, 1888

I.

Statistics in College, by C. D. Wright; Sociology and Political Economy, by F. H. Giddings; The Legal-Tender Decisions, by E. J. James. Pp. 80.

2. Capital and Its Earnings. By John B. Clark. Pp. 69.

3. The Manual Laboring Class, by F. A. Walker; Mine Labor in the Hocking Valley, by E. W. Bemis; Report of the Second Annual Meeting. Pp. 86.

4-5

**Statistics and Economics. By Richmond Mayo-Smith. Pp. 127.

6.5 The Stability of Prices. By Simon N. Patten. Pp. 04.

Volume IV, 1889

I. Contributions to the Wages Question: The Theory of Wages, by Stuart
Wood; Possibility of a Scientific Law of Wages, by J. B. Clark.
Pp. 69.

2.

Socialism in England. By Sidney Webb. Pp. 73.

3. Road Legislation for the American State. By J. W. Jenks. Pp. 83. 4. Third Annual Meeting: Report of the Proceedings. Pp. 123.

[blocks in formation]

5. Malthus and Ricardo, by S. N. Patten; The Study of Statistics, by D. R. Dewey; Analysis in Political Economy, by W. W. Folwell. Pp. 69.

.75

.75

6. An Honest Dollar. By E. Benjamin Andrews. Pp. 50.

1.

Volume V, 1890

The Industrial Transition in Japan. By Yeijiro Ono. Pp. 122. 2. Two Essays on Child-Labor. By W. F. Willoughby and Clare de Graffenried. Pp. 150.

[ocr errors]

1.00

.75

3-4 Papers on the Canal Question. By E. J. James and L. M. Haupt. Pp. 85. 1.00 5. History of the New York Property Tax. By J. C. Schwab. Pp. 108. 6. The Educational Value of Political Economy. By S. N. Patten. Pp. 36. .75

1.00

Volume VI, 1891

1-2. Fourth Annual Meeting: Reports, Papers, Discussions.
3. Government Forestry. Papers by Pinchot, Bowers, and Fernow. Pp. 102.
4-5. Municipal Ownership of Gas in the U. S. By E. W. Bemis. Pp. 185.
6. State Railroad Commissions. By F. C. Clark. Pp. 110.

I.

Volume VII, 1892

*The Silver Situation in the United States. By F. W. Taussig. Pp. 118.
2-3. **Shifting and Incidence of Taxation. By É. R. A. Seligman. Pp. 424
(Revised).

4-5. Sinking Funds. By Edward A. Ross. Pp. 106.

6. The Reciprocity Treaty with Canada of 1854. By F. E. Haynes. Pp. 70.

I.

Volume VIII, 1893

Fifth Annual Meeting: Report of the Proceedings. Pp. 130.

1.00

.75
1.00
.75

.75

2.00

1.00

.75

.75

1.00

1.00

2-3. Housing of the Poor in American Cities. By M. T. Reynolds. Pp. 132.
4-5. Public Assistance of the Poor in France. By E. G. Balch. Pp. 180.
6. First Stages of the Tariff Policy of the U. S. By William Hill. Pp. 162. 1.00

Volume IX, 1894

Sixth Annual Meeting: Hand-Book and Report. Pp. 73.
1-2. **Progressive Taxation in Theory and Practice.

Seligman. Pp. 222. (See 1908, No. 4.)

[ocr errors][merged small]

By Edwin R. A.

1.00

.75

.75

.75

3. The Theory of Transportation. By C. H. Cooley. Pp. 148.
4. Sir William Petty. By Wilson Lloyd Bevan. Pp. 102.
5-6. Papers on Labor Problems. By J. B. Clark, C. D. Wright, D. R. Dewey,
A. T. Hadley, and J. G. Brooks. Pp. 94.

Volume X, 1895

Seventh Annual Meeting: Hand-Book and Report. Pp. 138.
1-3. The Canadian Banking System, 1817-1890. By R. M. Breckenridge.
Pp. 478.

.50

1.50

4. Poor Laws of Massachusetts and New York. By John Cummings.
Pp. 136.

.75

5-6. Letters of Ricardo to McCulloch, 1816-1823. Edited by J. H. Hollander.
Pp. 204. (In Cloth, $1.75.)

1.25

Volume XI, 1896

1-3. Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro. By F. L. Hoffman.
Pp. 330.

4. Appreciation and Interest. By Irving Fisher. Pp. 110.
*General Index to Volumes I-XI (1886-1896).

[merged small][merged small][subsumed][ocr errors][merged small]

Price of the Economic Studies $2.50 per volume in paper, $3.00 in cloth. The set of four
volumes, in cloth, $10.00.

Volume I, 1896

Eighth Annual Meeting: Hand-Book and Report. Pp. 178.

1. The Theory of Economic Progress, by J. B. Clark; The Relation of
Changes in the Volume of the Currency to Prosperity. By F. A.
Walker. Pp. 46.

2. The Adjustment of Wages to Efficiency. Three Papers: Gain Sharing,
by H. R. Towne; The Premium Plan, by F. A. Halsey; A Piece-
Rate System, by F. W. Taylor. Pp. 83.

[blocks in formation]

3. The Populist Movement. By Frank L. McVey. Pp. 81.

4. The Present Monetary Situation. By W. Lexis. Translated by John Cummings. Pp. 72.

.50

.50

5-6. The Street Railway Problem in Cleveland. By W. R. Hopkins. Pp. 94. 75

Volume II, 1897

I.

2.

Ninth Annual Meeting: Hand-Book and Report. Pp. 162.

Economics and Jurisprudence. By Henry C. Adams. Pp. 48.

The Saloon Question in Chicago. By John E. George. Pp. 62.

3. The General Property Tax in California. By C. C. Plehn. Pp. 88.

4 Area and Population of the U. S. at Eleventh Census. By W. F. Willcox. Pp. 60.

5. A Discussion Concerning the Currencies of the British Plantations in America, etc. By William Douglass. Edited by C. J. Bullock. Pp. 228.

6. Density and Distribution of Population in U. S. at Eleventh Census. By W. F. Willcox. Pp. 79.

Volume III, 1898

[blocks in formation]

3.

4.

The American Federation of Labor. By Morton A. Aldrich. Pp. 54. 5. Housing of the Working People in Yonkers. By E. L. Bogart. Pp. 82. 6. The State Purchase of Railways in Switzerland. By Horace Michelie; translated by John Cummings. Pp. 72.

Tenth Annual Meeting: Hand-Book and Report. Pp. 136.

1. Government by Injunction. By William H. Dunbar.

Pp. 44.

.50

.50

2. Economic Aspects of Railroad Receiverships. By H. H. Swain. Pp. 118. .50 The Ohio Tax Inquisitor Law. By T. N. Carver. Pp. 50.

.50

.50

.50

.50

Volume IV, 1899

Eleventh Annual Meeting: Hand-Book and Report. Pp. 126.

I. I. Economics and Politics. By A. T. Hadley. II. Report on Currency
Reform. III. Report on the Twelfth Census. Pp. 70.

2. Personal Competition. By Charles H. Cooley. Pp. 104.
3. Economics as a School Study. By F. R. Clow. Pp. 72.
4-5. The English Income Tax. By J. A. Hill. Pp. 162.

6 (and last). *Effects of Recent Changes in Monetary Standards upon Distribution of Wealth. By F. S. Kinder. Pp. 91.

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][subsumed][merged small][merged small]

I.

NEW SERIES

The Cotton Industry. By M. B. Hammond. Pp. 382. (In cloth $2.00.) 1.50 2. Scope and Method of the Twelfth Census. Critical discussion by over twenty statistical experts. Pp. 625. (In cloth $2.50.) Both volumes, in cloth, $4.00.

2.00

THIRD SERIES

NOTE.-During 1896-1899 the Association issued its publications in two series, viz.: the bimonthly Economic Studies, and the "New Series" of larger monographs printed at irregular intervals. In 1900 it reverted to the policy of issuing its monographs, now called the "Third Series" of the publications, at quarterly intervals.

Volume I, 1900

1. Twelfth Annual Meeting: Papers on Trusts; Railroad Problem; Eco

« AnteriorContinuar »