Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: From Cameralism to Ordoliberalism
- 2 Cameralism and the science of government
- 3 Die Vernunft des List. National economy and the critique of cosmopolitan economy
- 4 Historical Economics, the Methodenstreit, and the economics of Max Weber
- 5 The Handelshochschulen and the formation of Betriebswirtschaftslehre, 1898–1925
- 6 The Logical Structure of the Economic World – the rationalist economics of Otto Neurath
- 7 Capitalism, totalitarianism and the legal order of National Socialism
- 8 The genealogy of the Social Market Economy: 1937–48
- 9 The New Economic Order and European economic integration
- Bibliography
- Index
- Ideas in Context
5 - The Handelshochschulen and the formation of Betriebswirtschaftslehre, 1898–1925
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: From Cameralism to Ordoliberalism
- 2 Cameralism and the science of government
- 3 Die Vernunft des List. National economy and the critique of cosmopolitan economy
- 4 Historical Economics, the Methodenstreit, and the economics of Max Weber
- 5 The Handelshochschulen and the formation of Betriebswirtschaftslehre, 1898–1925
- 6 The Logical Structure of the Economic World – the rationalist economics of Otto Neurath
- 7 Capitalism, totalitarianism and the legal order of National Socialism
- 8 The genealogy of the Social Market Economy: 1937–48
- 9 The New Economic Order and European economic integration
- Bibliography
- Index
- Ideas in Context
Summary
The relationship between theory and practice in commercial education is, … in both America and Germany, the reverse of that which is generally anticipated. Germany, the land of thinkers and dreamers, conducts commercial training in a primarily practical fashion; America, the land of the practical man par excellence, has, for general want of practical commercial training, to everywhere adopt a purely theoretical pedagogy, and falls over itself in the invention and foundation of ever newer institutions for commercial education.
It is generally assumed today that business education at university level is an American invention. This belief finds reinforcement in the style and substance of management education as it diffused throughout Western Europe in the 1950s and 1960s. Modern management meant the introduction of American business methods; training in these methods meant the use of American curricular models and textbooks. But this propensity to turn to an American model was not unique to the postwar years; we can find traces of it at the beginning of this century. When, in 1902, W. J. Ashley presided over the creation of the first Faculty of Commerce at a British university, he appealed to the precedents set by recent American developments. Ashley, an Oxford history graduate, had been hired back from North America to lead the faculty: first Professor of Political Economy and Constitutional History at Toronto from 1888 to 1892, then the inaugural Professor of Economic History at Harvard University, his knowledge of developments in North American business education was considered of critical importance to the success of the Birmingham faculty.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Strategies of Economic OrderGerman Economic Discourse, 1750–1950, pp. 95 - 139Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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