International Economics in the International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
这篇书评介绍了《国际社会科学百科全书》中与国际经济学相关的16篇非传记文章,指出其占经济学内容的比重从39%降至14%,但国际经济学在经济学内部的相对重要性上升。
T HE NEW International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences has already received the attention it rightly deserves. It is a worthy sequel the Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences which has, since its publication in the early 1930s, become badly outdated with respect both facts and theoretical developments in rapidly moving disciplines. The IESS is a wholly new product, not merely a revision of the earlier work. Its editors set themselves the task to make available readers throughout the world the concepts, principles, theories, methods, and empirical regularities that characterize the social sciences today (vol. 1, p. xxiii) and urged contributors include historical and descriptive material illustrate concepts and theories, rather than for its own sake. The publication coming from this effort contains 1716 articles-598 are biographical entries-bound in 17 volumes (including an extensive index) and selling for $503 a set, postpaid. (The Preface reports that the publisher was willing invest $2 million in the enterprise.) Casual perusal of the articles suggests that the editors were successful and early sales support this: an initial printing of 10,000 was sold out within five months, and the set went into a second printing of similar size. The buyers, I am told, include a large number of high schools, using Title II funds under the Federal Elementary and Secondary School Act. The purpose of this review is draw attention the non-biographical entries dealing with international economics. Sixteen articles deal directly with intemational economics, that is, with subjects that might be covered in a college course of that title. Many others, such as those on central banking, foreign aid (economic), mercantilism, spatial economics, and a number of the biographies, of course are also relevant international economics. About the same number of articles on international economcs appeared in the earlier Encyclopedia, and by rough calculation the share of international economics in the total material remained unchanged at 1.2 percent. But while in the earlier Encyclopedia 39 percent of the total coverage represented topics in economics, in the IESS this share dropped 14 percent [3, Sills, 1969, p. 1173]. No doubt this reflects not only the change in principal editorship from two economists (E.R.A. Seligman and Alvin Johnson) a sociologist (David Sills) but also the relative growth during the past generation of anthropology, sociology, statistics, and (especially) psychology. Thus international economists can take some satisfaction that the relative importance of their field within the discipline of economics seems have risen sharply; or else international economists are more prolix than their closed economy counterparts. Thirteen of the sixteen articles on international economics are grouped under three broad headings: international monetary economics is covered by R. A. Mundell