Andrew Glyn

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Andrew Glyn, (30 June 194322 December 2007) was a United Kingdom-based economist, University Lecturer in Economics at the University of Oxford and Fellow and Tutor in Economics in Corpus Christi College. A Marxist economist, his research interests focussed on issues of unemployment and inequality. He was Associate Editor: Oxford Review of Economic Policy. He was a consultant for the National Union of Mineworkers and for the International Labour Organisation.

Contents

[edit] Published Books

  • Capitalism Unleashed. Oxford University Press, 2006.[1]
  • Social democracy in neoliberal times : the left and economic policy since 1980. Oxford University Press, 2001.
  • Colliery closures and the decline of the UK coal industry, with Stephen Machin. Oxford : Institute of Economics and Statistics, University of Oxford, 1996.
  • The North, the South, and the environment : ecological constraints and the global economy, with V Bhaskar. St. Martin's Press, 1995.
  • British Capitalism, Workers and the Profit Squeeze, with Bob Sutcliffe. Penguin, 1972; also translated into Italian, German, and Japanese.
  • The British Economic Disaster, with John Harrison. Pluto, 1980; (also translated into Japanese).
  • Capitalism Since World War II: The Making and Breakup of the Great Boom, with Philip Armstrong and John Harrison. Fontana, 1984. 2nd edition as Capitalism Since 1945, Blackwells 1991. Also translated into Chinese and Korean.
  • A Million Jobs a Year. Verso, 1985.
  • Capitalism in crisis, with Robert B Sutcliffe. Pantheon Books, 1972.
  • British capitalism, workers and the profits squeeze with Robert B Sutcliffe. Penguin, 1972.

[edit] Other published works

He also published 36 peer-reviewed journal articles, many book chapters and a number of essays. He addition wrote a number of magazine articles and newspaper columns, including those in the Guardian, Financial Times, New Statesman, and New York Times,

[edit] References

  1. ^ OUP catalog entry. Reviewed in The Guardian [1], International Review of Applied Economics [2], World Economics [3], and De Economist [4]; interview and review in Socialist Review [5].

[edit] External links