Alexander Nove
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexander Nove FRSE, FBA (24 November 1915, Saint Petersburg - 15 May 1994, Glasgow) was Professor of Economics at the University of Glasgow.
Contents |
[edit] Education
- King Alfred School, London
- London School of Economics (Honorary Fellow, 1982); BSc (Econ) 1936.
[edit] Career
- Army, 1939-46
- Civil Service (mainly Board of Trade), 1947-58
- Reader in Russian Social and Economic Studies, University of London, 1958-63
- Professor of Economics, University of Glasgow, 1963-82, then Emeritus Professor
- Honorary Senior Research Fellow, Glasgow, 1982-1994
[edit] Publications
- The Soviet Economy, 1961
- (with J. A. Newth) The Soviet Middle East, 1965
- Was Stalin Really Necessary?, 1965
- Economic History of the USSR, 1969, 3rd edn 1993
- (ed with D. M. Nuti) Socialist Economics, 1972
- Efficiency Criteria for Nationalised Industries, 1973
- Stalinism and After, 1976
- The Soviet Economic System, 1977, 3rd edn 1986
- Political Economy and Soviet Socialism, 1979
- The Economics of Feasible Socialism, 1983
- Socialism, Economics and Development, 1986
- Glasnost in Action, 1989
- Economics of Feasible Socialism Revisited, 1991
- Studies in Economics and Russia, 1991
- (ed) The Stalin Phenomenon, 1993.
[edit] References
This article about a British historian or genealogist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
Categories: 1915 births | 1994 deaths | Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh | Fellows of the British Academy | British economists | British civil servants | British historians | Jewish historians | British Jews | Russian Jews | Alumni of the London School of Economics | People from Saint Petersburg | Economist stubs | United Kingdom academic biography stubs | British historian stubs