Economics handbooks are
handbooks on subjects of
economics. Such handbooks range in audience from the general reader[1] to the advanced student and professional
economist.[2]
Examples
Economics handbooks that form a series include, but are not limited to, the following:
Cambridge Economic Handbooks – associated with
Cambridge University Press in the
U.K. It began in 1922 with volumes titled Supply and Demand[3] and Money.[4] Volumes in the series carry an often-cited introduction of
J. M. Keynes, its first editor.[5] Later works in the series include more specialized topics but written for accessibility. Various publishers have carried the series outside the U.K., including and Harcourt and University of Chicago Press in the
U.S. First editions include some 25 volumes through 1993.[6]
Economics Handbooks from
McGraw-Hill – began in 1948 with a volume titled The Location of Economic Activity.[7] The series includes over 40 volumes through 1982.[8]
Handbooks in Economics from
Elsevier – include the early set Handbook of Mathematical Economics, 2 v., 1981–82.[9]Handbooks through 2011 include some 30 titles, most of them in 2 or more volumes.[10] The general co-editors for the series in its first three decades are
Kenneth J. Arrow and Michael D. Intriligator.
Edward Elgar Publishing – lists over 200 economics handbooks published from Economics of Defence, Disarmament and Peace, its first volume in 1990, to the
present.
Other economics handbooks, whether general or specialized, may come from publishers as part of a series beyond extending economics[11] or on
ad hoc basis.[12]
The textbook approach to teaching economics has been criticised by many as a problematic way of passing on knowledge because students gain the impression that textbooks present a true and uncontested version of economics. In contrast, what organizations that are active in
economics education such as
Rethinking Economics pledge for is to expose students to various
schools of economic thought and provide them with the analytical tools to critically compare and evaluate them.
^For example: • Hubert D. Henderson, 1922. Supply and Demand, Cambridge. Chapter-preview
links. •
D. H. Robertson, 1922, Money, Cambridge. Chapter-preview
links.
^For example: •
Kenneth J. Arrow,
Amartya K. Sen, and
Kotaro Suzumura, 2002, Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, v. 1. Chapter-preview
links. • _____, ed., 2011, Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, v. 2. Chapter-preview
links.
^Hubert D. Henderson, 1922. Supply and Demand. Chapter-preview
links.
^D. H. Robertson, 1922, Money. Chapter-preview
links.
^J. M. Keynes "Introduction to the Series," in D. H. Robertson, 1922, Money, pp.
v–vi.
^Kenneth J. Arrow and Michael D. Intriligator, Handbook of Mathematical Economics, 1st-page chapter links: • 1981, v.
1 • 1982. v.
2
^• Via Search Type → Series, Hollis Full Catalog:
Handbooks in economics[permanent dead link]. • Respective Elsevier description and preview links for the Handbooks in Economics chapters are
here.