Elise S. Brezis

Professor of Economics


Curriculum vitae



Head, Israel Macroeconomic Forum


Department of Economics

Bar-Ilan University, Israel



Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth


Book


Elise S. Brezis, Peter Temin
North-Holland, Elsevier, 1999 Dec, 268 pages

Book Review Publisher Book Page
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Brezis, E. S., & Temin, P. (1999). Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth (pp. 268 pages). North-Holland, Elsevier.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Brezis, Elise S., and Peter Temin. Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth. North-Holland, Elsevier, 1999.


MLA   Click to copy
Brezis, Elise S., and Peter Temin. Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth. North-Holland, Elsevier, 1999, pp. 268 pages.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@book{brezis1999a,
  title = {Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth},
  year = {1999},
  month = dec,
  pages = {268 pages},
  publisher = {North-Holland, Elsevier},
  author = {Brezis, Elise S. and Temin, Peter},
  month_numeric = {12}
}

Overview

This book examines the relationship between elites, minorities, and economic growth. The novelty of the book lies in its focus on the interaction between social and economic changes during economic growth. This is an undeveloped subject because it crosses disciplinary lines.

The first part of the book contains essays on the role of economic and political elites in America, Europe and the Middle East. The second part of the book contains essays on the role of minorities in past and present industrialization in Europe and Asia. And the final part contains more theoretical approaches that build on the historical essays earlier in the volume.

Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth is particularly useful for macroeconomists interested in economic growth, economic historians, sociologists interested in elites, minorities and social mobility and historians of industrialization and economic growth.

Content

Full text of several of the chapters is available.
Click the linked chapter titles to view PDF.

Preface

I. Introduction

1. Elites, Minorities and Economic Growth in an Interdisciplinary Perspective
Elise S. Brezis and Peter Temin

II. Economic, Political Elites and Growth

2. The American Business Elite in Historical Perspective
Peter Temin
3. Business Dynasties in Britain and France
François Crouzet
4. Elites and Civil Societies in the Middle East
Baruch Kimmerling
5. The Recruitment and Role of Elites in Israel
Eva Etzioni-Halevy
6. Elites, Ethnic Mobilizations and Democracy in Postcommunist Europe
Jan Pakulski
7. Two Waves of Professionalization of the Hungarian Economic Elite
György Lengyel

III. Minorities and Growth

8. Don't Beat Up the Little Guys
David S. Landes
9. How do Minorities Become Elites?
Peter Mathias
10. The Jews, the English Industrial Revolution, Technological Innovations and the Sciences
Paul Bairoch
11. The Weber Thesis and the Jews
William D. Rubinstein
12. The Role of the Chinese Minorities in the Economic Development of Southeast Asian Countries
Eliezer B. Ayal

IV. Theories of Elites and Minorities

13. The Memberships Theory of Inequality: Ideas and Implications
Steven N. Durlauf
14. Invention and Rebellion: Why do Innovations Occur at all? An Evolutionary Approach
Joel Mokyr
15. The Democratization of Political Elites and the Decline in Inequality in Modern Economic Growth
Moshe Justman and Mark Gradstein
16. Elites and the Economics of Political Radicalism: Evidence from Oldham, 1841-1852
Adam Klug and Carmel Nadav
17. Elite Schools, Circulation of Elites and Economic Development: the ENA Case
Elise S. Brezis and François Crouzet

Index





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