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  1. Alfred Marshall was one of the chief founders of the school of English neoclassical economists and the first principal of University College, Bristol (1877–81). Marshall was educated at Merchant Taylors’ School and at St. John’s College, Cambridge. He was a fellow and lecturer in political economy.

  2. The Alfred Marshall Lectureship was established at the Faculty of Economics in 1932 in memory of Alfred Marshall, arguably the founder of modern economic science and undisputedly one of its pioneers.

  3. May 21, 2020 · The chapter deals essentially with economics in Cambridge, UK, with Marshall as leader of a wide community of scholars, the so-called Old Cambridge School: by the 1890s, their neoclassical thought had become the international mainstream.

    • Roberto Marchionatti
    • roberto.marchionatti@unito.it
    • 2020
  4. Sep 4, 2022 · This chapter focuses on a landmark figure: Alfred Marshall (1842–1924), University of Cambridge. On the one hand, he inherited both the spirits of the classical school and the scientific methods of the marginal school; on the other hand, and more importantly, he proposed original concepts and analytical tools that are still widely used.

  5. Marshall turned Cambridge into a world-renown center for the study of economics. When he arrived, one studied economics in either the Moral Science or History Tripos.

  6. Jun 10, 2024 · British economist, regarded as one of the founders of the neoclassical school in economics. Marshall was born in London and graduated in mathematics from St John's College, Cambridge. He began lecturing in moral science at Cambridge in 1868.

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  8. Alfred Marshall, 1842-1924. Prominent English economist, one of the leading propagators of Neoclassical economics, founder of the "Cambridge" school of Neoclassicism and author of its most successful textbook, Principles of Economics (1890). Early years.

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