- Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson discuss the work of Jim Scott in a (so far) three-part series: here, here and here.
- This reminds me of an oldie but goodie: Brad Delong on Seeing Like a State. Also, Paul Seabright’s review in the LRB.
- “We hate them, and we don’t even know why”
- What’s the evidence base for post-conflict interventions?
- What was the effect of Brazil’s cash transfer program on poverty?
7 Responses
Links I liked: Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson discuss the work of Jim Scott in a (so far) three-part series… http://t.co/RQNYOjnDHO
Dear Chris let me share in your blog a chapter I wrote on conditional cash transfer programs in the 2014 edition of The Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom: http://www.heritage.org/index/book/chapter-4
Today’s links http://t.co/Oi4A7cfSNr
Further links on Scott (incl the definitive review of his affinities with Hayek’s arguments) via Chris Blattman http://t.co/qUlukIUPkv
Links I liked http://t.co/Ug505Aojcm
Seabright’s piece ungated: http://paulseabright.com/?page_id=104 Scroll down.
RT @cblatts: Links I liked http://t.co/9foXK2gzPs