Difference between revisions of "London School of Economics"

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The LSE had been founded in the late nineteenth century by Sidney and Beatrice Webb in a spirit of Fabian socialism, and in the thirties its director, Sir [[William Beveridge]], continued that tradition. But in 1930s the School had also become the redoubt of a small group of economists radically antagonistic to the emerging on of social democratic interventionism that would come to be called Keynesian. This opposition was led by a triumvirate who lived cheek by jowl in Hampstead—[[Lionel Robbins]], [[Friedrich von Hayek]], and [[Arnold Plant]].<ref>Johns, Adrian (2010). [http://{{SERVERNAME}}/log/?p=3601 ''Death of a Pirate: British Radio and the Making of the Information Age'']. W. W. Norton & Company, p 74.</ref>
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The LSE had been founded in the late nineteenth century by Sidney and Beatrice Webb in a spirit of Fabian socialism, and in the thirties its director, Sir [[William Beveridge]], continued that tradition. But in 1930s the School had also become the redoubt of a small group of economists radically antagonistic to the emerging on of social democratic interventionism that would come to be called Keynesian. This opposition was led by a triumvirate who lived cheek by jowl in Hampstead—[[Lionel Robbins]], [[Friedrich von Hayek]], and [[Arnold Plant]].<ref>Johns, Adrian (2010). [http://monoskop.multiplace.org/log/?p=3601 ''Death of a Pirate: British Radio and the Making of the Information Age'']. W. W. Norton & Company, p 74.</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 18:37, 25 July 2015

The LSE had been founded in the late nineteenth century by Sidney and Beatrice Webb in a spirit of Fabian socialism, and in the thirties its director, Sir William Beveridge, continued that tradition. But in 1930s the School had also become the redoubt of a small group of economists radically antagonistic to the emerging on of social democratic interventionism that would come to be called Keynesian. This opposition was led by a triumvirate who lived cheek by jowl in Hampstead—Lionel Robbins, Friedrich von Hayek, and Arnold Plant.[1]

Notes

  1. Johns, Adrian (2010). Death of a Pirate: British Radio and the Making of the Information Age. W. W. Norton & Company, p 74.

See also