Achille Loria

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Achille Loria (March 2, 1857, Mantua - November 6, 1943) was an Italian political economist.

He was educated at the lyceum of his native city and the universities of Bologna, Pavia, Rome, Berlin, and London and graduated at the University of Bologna (1877). He became professor of political economy in the University of Siena in 1881; and he has held a similar appointment in the University of Padua (1891-1903), and University of Torino (1903-1932). He was elected to the Accademia dei Licei (1901) and appointed to the Italian Senate in 1919. His work draws on a wide range of predecessors: Karl Marx, Charles Spencer, Charles Darwin, Adolf Wagner and Luigi Cossa, who was his teacher. With this background and on the basis of research on landholding in the British Museum he developed an original deterministic theory of economic development. It is based on the premise that the relative scarcity of land leads to the subjugation of some members of society by others, a mechanism that works differently in different stages of development. This concept was developed in a large number of books, many of which were translated into foreign languages. They had impact on writers like Charles A. Beard and indirectly influenced their interpretation of American history. Achille Loria is also seen as a forerunner of socio-legal studies (see International Institute for the Sociology of Law).

[edit] English language bibliography

  • Achille Loria, The Economic Foundations of Society. Londonm: Sonnenschein 1904.
  • Achille Loria, Contemporary Social Problems, London: Sonnenschein 1911
  • Achille Loria, The Economic Synthesis: A Study of the Laws of Income. LOndon: Allen and Unwin 1914
  • Lee Benson, Turner and Beard: American Historical Writing Reconsidered. Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press 1950 (see pages 2-40 on "Achille Loria´s influence on American Economic thought").

Shepard B. Clough, Loria, Achille. In: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 9/10, New York 1972, pp. 474-475.

For further bibliographic reference (in Italian) see "Other languages: Italian".


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