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Elulookirjeldus (CV)
1.Eesnimi Erik
2.Perekonnanimi Reinert
3.Töökoht Tallinna Tehnikaülikool
4.Ametikoht Tehnoloogia juhtimise erakorraline professor
5.Sünniaeg 15.02.1949 (päev.kuu.aasta)
6.Haridus PhD Cornell University, USA, 1980
MBA Harvard University, 1976
Cand.oec. University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, 1973
7.Teenistuskäik 1995-2001 Head of Research, Norwegian Investor Forum; 1996-1999 Senior Research Associate, Center for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo; 1993-1997 Instructor in Economics, University of Oslo; 1992-1995 Senior Research Associate, STEP-Group – Studies in Technologyx, Innovation, and Economic Policy, Oslo; 1980-1981 Economist, evaluation of the Irish industrial policy, Telesis Inc., Paris – Dublin; 1972-1991 Founder, Managing Director (1972-1974), and Chairman (1974-1981), Matheson-Selig SPA, Bergamo, Italy; 1978 Lecturer in Economics, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, USA.
8.Teaduskraad PhD
9.Teaduskraadi välja
andnud asutus, aasta
Cornell University, 1980
10.Tunnustused
11.Teadusorganisatsiooniline
ja –administratiivne
tegevus
Coordinator for the Nordic Innovation Network (NIN), a network of evolutionary economists in the Nordic countries. Annual conferences 1993-1998.

The Other Canon Foundation, an international research project aiming to re-introduce a non-mechanichal, creativity- and innovation-based economic theory as an alternative to the ruling mechanical theory that sees capital per se as the moving force of the world economic system. Meetings/conferences held in Cambridge (UK) and Cambridge, Mass., Venice and Oslo since 1999 (www.othercanon.org)
12.Juhendamisel kaitstud
väitekirjad
13.Teadustöö põhisuunad technology governance
14.Jooksvad grandid
15.Teaduspublikatsioonid

‘Creative Destruction in Economics: Nietzsche, Sombart, Schumpeter’ (with Hugo Reinert), forthcoming in Backhaus, Jürgen and Wolfgang Drechsler (editors): Friedrich Nietzsche 1844-2000: Economy and Society, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2005 forthcoming

‘German Economics as Development Economics: From the Thirty Years War to World War II’, In Jomo, K.S. and Erik S. Reinert (editors), Pioneers of Economic Development, forthcoming 2005.

‘Mercantilism and Economic Development: Schumpeterian Dynamics, Institution Building and International Benchmarking’ (with Sophus Reinert), In Jomo, K.S., Pioneers of Economic Development, forthcoming 2005.

‘Nietzsche and the German Historical School’ (with Sophus Reinert), forthcoming in Backhaus, Jürgen and Wolfgang Drechsler (editors): Friedrich Nietzsche 1844-2000: Economy and Society, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2005 forthcoming.

Pioneers of Economic Development, Zed Publications, editor (with K.S. Jomo), forthcoming in 2005.

The Origins of Development Economics: How Schools of Economic Thought Have Addressed Development, forthcoming 2005, co-editor.

“The Other Canon and Uneven Growth: The Activity-Specific Elements of Economic Development”, in Dymski, Gary and Silvana de Paula, eds., Reimagining Growth, London: Zed Publications, in press.

‘A Bibliography of J.H.G. von Justi’ (with Hugo Reinert), forthcoming in Backhaus, Jürgen (editor), Johann Friedrich Gottlob von Justi: The Beginning of Political Economy, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2004.

Globalization, Economic Development and Inequality: An Alternative Perspective, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2004, editor.

How Rich Nations got Rich. Essays in the History of Economic Policy, SUM – Center for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, 2004.

‘Johann Heinrich Gottlob von Justi (1717-1771): The Life and Times of an Economist Adventurer’, forthcoming Backhaus, Jürgen (editor), Johann Friedrich Gottlob von Justi: The Beginning of Political Economy, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2004.

‘The Qualitative Shift in European Integration: Towards Permanent Wage Pressures and a ‘Latin-Americanization’ of Europe?’ (with Rainer Kattel), Praxis Working Paper no. 17, Praxis Foundation, Estonia. http://www.praxis.ee/data/WP_17_2004.pdf Forthcoming in. Brazil.

‘Austrians Economics and the Other Canon: The Austrians between the activistic-idealistic and the passivistic-materialistic tradition of economics’, in Backhaus, Jürgen (editor), Evolutionary Economic Thought. European Contributions and Concepts, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2003.

‘Increasing Poverty in a Globalised World: Marshall Plans and Morgenthau Plans as Mechanisms of Polarisation of World Incomes’, in Chang, Ha-Joon (editor), Rethinking Economic Development, London, Anthem, 2003.

‘Schumpeter in the Context of two Canons of Economic Thought’, in Industry and Innovation, Vol. 6, No. 1, 2002.

“Compensation Mechanisms and Targeted Economic Growth – Lessons from the History of Economic Policy”, in Vivarelli, Marco and Mario Pianta, eds., The Employment Impact of Innovation, London: Routledge, 2000.

“Full Circle: Economics from Scholasticism through Innovation and back into Mathematical Scholasticism. Reflections around a 1769 price essay: ’Why is it that Economics so Far has Gained so Few Advantages from Physics and Mathematics?'”, Journal of Economic Studies, vol. 27, no. 4/5, 2000.

‘Karl Bücher and the Geographical Dimensions of Techno-Economic Change’, in Backhaus, Jürgen, (Editor) Karl Bücher: Theory - History - Anthropology - Non-Market Economies, Marburg, Metropolis Verlag, 2000.

“The Role of the State in Economic Growth”, in Toninelli, Pier Angelo, ed., The Rise and Fall of State-Owned Enterprises in the Western World, Cambridg: Cambridge University Press, 2000. (Also in Estonian and Spanish.

“Raw Materials in the History of Economic Policy; or, Why List (the Protectionist) and Cobden (the Free Trader) Both Agreed on Free Trade in Corn”, in Parry, G., ed., Freedom and Trade. 1846-1996, London: Routledge, 1998.

“Economics: The Dismal Science or The Never-ending Frontier of Knowledge. On Technology, Energy, and Economic Welfare”, Norwegian Oil Review, vol. 22, no. 7, 1996.

“The role of technology in the creation of rich and poor nations: Underdevelopment in a Schumpeterian system”, in Aldcroft, Derek H. and Ross Catterall, eds., Rich Nations - Poor Nations. The long run perspective, Aldershot: Edward Elgar, 1996. (Also in Spanish.)

‘Competitiveness and its predecessors - a 500 year cross-national perspective’. In Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, Vol. 6, 1995, pp. 23-42.

“Technology transfer vs. technological learning: IT-infrastructure and health care in developing countries” (with Jørn Braa and Eric Monteiro), IT and Development, vol. 6, no. 1, 1995, pp. 15-23.

‘Catching-up from way behind - A Third World perspective on First World history’. In Fagerberg, Jan et. al. (eds.) The Dynamics of Technology, Trade, and Growth, Aldershot, Edward Elgar, 1994

International Trade and the Economic Mechanisms of Underdevelopment. Ph D. thesis, Cornell University. Ann Arbor, Michigan, University Microfilms, 1980.

“President Velasco's Third Way: A Strategy for Change” (with Jaroslav Vanek), Annals of Public and Co-operative Economy, vol. 49, no. 2, April-June, 1978 (also in Spanish, French, and German).

viimati muudetud: 10.08.2005

Curriculum Vitae (CV)
1.First Name Erik
2.Surname Reinert
3.Institution Tallinn University of Technology
4.Position Extraordinary professor of technology governance
5.Date of birth 15.02.1949 (day.month.year)
6.Education PhD Cornell University, USA, 1980
MBA Harvard University, 1976
Cand.oec. University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, 1973
7.Research and
professional experience
1995-2001 Head of Research, Norwegian Investor Forum; 1996-1999 Senior Research Associate, Center for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo; 1993-1997 Instructor in Economics, University of Oslo; 1992-1995 Senior Research Associate, STEP-Group – Studies in Technologyx, Innovation, and Economic Policy, Oslo; 1980-1981 Economist, evaluation of the Irish industrial policy, Telesis Inc., Paris – Dublin; 1972-1991 Founder, Managing Director (1972-1974), and Chairman (1974-1981), Matheson-Selig SPA, Bergamo, Italy; 1978 Lecturer in Economics, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, USA.
8.Academic degree PhD
9.Dates and sites of
earning the degrees
Cornell University, 1980
10.Honours/awards
11.Research-administrative
experience
Coordinator for the Nordic Innovation Network (NIN), a network of evolutionary economists in the Nordic countries. Annual conferences 1993-1998.

The Other Canon Foundation, an international research project aiming to re-introduce a non-mechanichal, creativity- and innovation-based economic theory as an alternative to the ruling mechanical theory that sees capital per se as the moving force of the world economic system. Meetings/conferences held in Cambridge (UK) and Cambridge, Mass., Venice and Oslo since 1999 (www.othercanon.org)
12.Supervised dissertations
13.Current research program technology governance
14.Current grant funding
15.List of most important publications

‘Creative Destruction in Economics: Nietzsche, Sombart, Schumpeter’ (with Hugo Reinert), forthcoming in Backhaus, Jürgen and Wolfgang Drechsler (editors): Friedrich Nietzsche 1844-2000: Economy and Society, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2005 forthcoming

‘German Economics as Development Economics: From the Thirty Years War to World War II’, In Jomo, K.S. and Erik S. Reinert (editors), Pioneers of Economic Development, forthcoming 2005.

‘Mercantilism and Economic Development: Schumpeterian Dynamics, Institution Building and International Benchmarking’ (with Sophus Reinert), In Jomo, K.S., Pioneers of Economic Development, forthcoming 2005.

‘Nietzsche and the German Historical School’ (with Sophus Reinert), forthcoming in Backhaus, Jürgen and Wolfgang Drechsler (editors): Friedrich Nietzsche 1844-2000: Economy and Society, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2005 forthcoming.

Pioneers of Economic Development, Zed Publications, editor (with K.S. Jomo), forthcoming in 2005.

The Origins of Development Economics: How Schools of Economic Thought Have Addressed Development, forthcoming 2005, co-editor.

“The Other Canon and Uneven Growth: The Activity-Specific Elements of Economic Development”, in Dymski, Gary and Silvana de Paula, eds., Reimagining Growth, London: Zed Publications, in press.

‘A Bibliography of J.H.G. von Justi’ (with Hugo Reinert), forthcoming in Backhaus, Jürgen (editor), Johann Friedrich Gottlob von Justi: The Beginning of Political Economy, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2004.

Globalization, Economic Development and Inequality: An Alternative Perspective, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2004, editor.

How Rich Nations got Rich. Essays in the History of Economic Policy, SUM – Center for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, 2004.

‘Johann Heinrich Gottlob von Justi (1717-1771): The Life and Times of an Economist Adventurer’, forthcoming Backhaus, Jürgen (editor), Johann Friedrich Gottlob von Justi: The Beginning of Political Economy, series The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences, Boston, Kluwer, 2004.

‘The Qualitative Shift in European Integration: Towards Permanent Wage Pressures and a ‘Latin-Americanization’ of Europe?’ (with Rainer Kattel), Praxis Working Paper no. 17, Praxis Foundation, Estonia. http://www.praxis.ee/data/WP_17_2004.pdf Forthcoming in. Brazil.

‘Austrians Economics and the Other Canon: The Austrians between the activistic-idealistic and the passivistic-materialistic tradition of economics’, in Backhaus, Jürgen (editor), Evolutionary Economic Thought. European Contributions and Concepts, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2003.

‘Increasing Poverty in a Globalised World: Marshall Plans and Morgenthau Plans as Mechanisms of Polarisation of World Incomes’, in Chang, Ha-Joon (editor), Rethinking Economic Development, London, Anthem, 2003.

‘Schumpeter in the Context of two Canons of Economic Thought’, in Industry and Innovation, Vol. 6, No. 1, 2002.

“Compensation Mechanisms and Targeted Economic Growth – Lessons from the History of Economic Policy”, in Vivarelli, Marco and Mario Pianta, eds., The Employment Impact of Innovation, London: Routledge, 2000.

“Full Circle: Economics from Scholasticism through Innovation and back into Mathematical Scholasticism. Reflections around a 1769 price essay: ’Why is it that Economics so Far has Gained so Few Advantages from Physics and Mathematics?'”, Journal of Economic Studies, vol. 27, no. 4/5, 2000.

‘Karl Bücher and the Geographical Dimensions of Techno-Economic Change’, in Backhaus, Jürgen, (Editor) Karl Bücher: Theory - History - Anthropology - Non-Market Economies, Marburg, Metropolis Verlag, 2000.

“The Role of the State in Economic Growth”, in Toninelli, Pier Angelo, ed., The Rise and Fall of State-Owned Enterprises in the Western World, Cambridg: Cambridge University Press, 2000. (Also in Estonian and Spanish.

“Raw Materials in the History of Economic Policy; or, Why List (the Protectionist) and Cobden (the Free Trader) Both Agreed on Free Trade in Corn”, in Parry, G., ed., Freedom and Trade. 1846-1996, London: Routledge, 1998.

“Economics: The Dismal Science or The Never-ending Frontier of Knowledge. On Technology, Energy, and Economic Welfare”, Norwegian Oil Review, vol. 22, no. 7, 1996.

“The role of technology in the creation of rich and poor nations: Underdevelopment in a Schumpeterian system”, in Aldcroft, Derek H. and Ross Catterall, eds., Rich Nations - Poor Nations. The long run perspective, Aldershot: Edward Elgar, 1996. (Also in Spanish.)

‘Competitiveness and its predecessors - a 500 year cross-national perspective’. In Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, Vol. 6, 1995, pp. 23-42.

“Technology transfer vs. technological learning: IT-infrastructure and health care in developing countries” (with Jørn Braa and Eric Monteiro), IT and Development, vol. 6, no. 1, 1995, pp. 15-23.

‘Catching-up from way behind - A Third World perspective on First World history’. In Fagerberg, Jan et. al. (eds.) The Dynamics of Technology, Trade, and Growth, Aldershot, Edward Elgar, 1994

International Trade and the Economic Mechanisms of Underdevelopment. Ph D. thesis, Cornell University. Ann Arbor, Michigan, University Microfilms, 1980.

“President Velasco's Third Way: A Strategy for Change” (with Jaroslav Vanek), Annals of Public and Co-operative Economy, vol. 49, no. 2, April-June, 1978 (also in Spanish, French, and German).

last updated: 10.08.2005

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