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THIRSTING FOR THE FRAY: THE CAMBRIDGE DUNNING OF MR. MACLEOD
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 August 2010
Abstract
In 1883 Henry Sidgwick complained that, with the recent undermining of the authority of political economy, “utterances of dissent from economic orthodoxy” could obtain a ready hearing. This was of particular concern to those writing and teaching on political economy at Cambridge University. As Henry Dunning Macleod was one of the dissenters named by Sidgwick, it appears odd that Macleod was also recognized as a lecturer in political economy at Cambridge between the late 1870s and mid-1880s. This article examines that peculiar occurrence, showing how Macleod exploited the struggle between reformers and conservatives over teaching reform in the university.
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- Copyright © The History of Economics Society 2010
References
REFERENCES
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Henry Dunning Macleod letters to John Hill Burton, 1860–1862, National Library of Scotland.
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