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| Biographical Info of Neil B. De MarchiNeil De Marchi is a professor of economics at Duke University where he joined the faculty in 1986. He has held numerous teaching positions prior to beginning his professorship at Duke, including Extraordinary Professor of the history and philosophy of economics at the University of Amsterdam, lecturer in economics at Monash University in Australia, and associate professor of economics at Duke University between 1975-80 and 1983-86. Neil received his Ph.D. from Australian National University in 1970, after completing his B.Phil in economics at the University of Oxford. He also obtained his B.Ec with first-class honors in 1960 from the University of Western Australia.Neil specializes in both teaching and research that pertains to the history of economic ideas and the history of markets, and also the functioning of markets with a specific focus on art markets. He recently received a generous grant from the Luce Foundation for an economics/art history collaboration that he shared with Goodwin, Van Miegroet, and Wharton. This research explores the political economy of spaces, creates arguments for the arts, and maps European markets for paintings from the years 1450-1750. Neil has been publishing his research and ideas in academic journals for almost four decades. His works have appeared in such journals as the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, the Journal of Econometrics, the European Journal for the History of Economic Thought, and the Art Bulletin. He has also contributed to pieces within various books, having written introductions to such works as “Idealization in Economics, Poznan Studies 38,” and a biographical entry of John Stewart Mill for The Handbook of Economic Methodology. Recent titles of his other works include, “Brueghel in Paris” and “The History of Art Markets,” both with Hans J. Van Miegroet; and “Smith and Hume on the Arts, Pleasure, and the Public Interest,” a contribution to the Luce-funded project pertaining to arguments for the arts. As a professor, Neil has served as chair or co-chair for over ten doctoral dissertation committees since 1986. Although he has spent most of his career in academia, Neil has also held positions within the professional world of economics, including his service as director of research for the Economics Research Department of the ABN Bank, Amsterdam, from 1980-83. He currently serves as an associate editor for the journal History of Political Economy. Neil is an Australian citizen who currently resides in the U.S. He speaks both English and Dutch. | |
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