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  1. Born in 1910, Sweezy was a scion of the establishment who opposed the ruling class from which he sprang. He was the youngest of three sons of Everett P. Sweezy, a First National Bank of New York vice president whose freethinking (honed in skepticism toward his wife Caroline’s devout Methodism) acclimated the boy to dissent early in life.

  2. 1. Okt. 2004 · Capitalism and the Environment. by Paul M. Sweezy. (Oct 01, 2004) Topics: Economic Theory Political Economy. This is a slightly modified version of a paper prepared for the roundtable “Socialism in the World” held at Cavtat, Yugoslavia, in October 1988. It first appeared in the June 1989 issue of Monthly Review.

  3. forever. Paul M. Sweezy, whose outstanding intellectual career spanned through the last seven decades of the twentieth century passed away on 28 February 2004. He was 94. Sweezy was born in a well-to-do American family from the East Coast on 10 April 1910. His father was the Vice-President of the First National Bank of New York. He went to ...

  4. 4. März 2004 · Hier sollte eine Beschreibung angezeigt werden, diese Seite lässt dies jedoch nicht zu.

  5. 1. Okt. 2004 · Paul M. Sweezy, “The Economic Crisis in the United States,” Monthly Review (December 1981): 4, 8. “Keynesian Chickens Come Home to Roost,” Monthly Review (April 1974) reprinted in Harry Magdoff and Paul M. Sweezy, The End of Prosperity: The American Economy in the 1970s (New York: Monthly Review, 1977), 21–2.

  6. Sweezy, Paul M. (Paul Marlor), 1910-2004. Paul Marlor Sweezy papers, 1900-2004 (MS Am 3024): Guide. Status in_progress Author Houghton Library, Harvard University. Date June 29, 2017 Description rules dacs Language of description und EAD ID hou02824

  7. Abstract. Paul Baran and Paul Sweezy carried on a voluminous correspondence in the 1950s and early 1960s that constitutes perhaps the foremost exchange of letters between Marxist political economists in the second half of the twentieth century, comparable in some ways to Marx and Engels's correspondence during the nineteenth century.