Home >> Science >> Social Sciences >> Economics >> Schools of Thought >> Chicago School


  Becker, Gary S
Coase, Ronald H
Friedman, Milton
  Knight, Frank H
Sowell, Thomas
Stigler, George J
  Viner, Jacob


A Latin School of Chicago occurs as microscopic, common soldier simple, middle & high school in the Gold Coast neighborhood in Chicago. A school was founded inside 1888. These are considered one of a top personal high in the city of Chicago.

Noted alumni

Bob Balaban - actor and producer. Carol Mendelsohn - television producer and writer. Nancy Reagan - former Foremost Lady & "Just Say No" anti-drug nominee. Roger McGuinn - singer and ballad maker. William Wrigley Jr. - industrialist. Lisa Madigan - current Illinois Attorney General. Laura Granville - profressional tennis streaming video player. Bill Wirtz - businessman and Chicago Blackhawks owner. John Marshall Harlan II - US Supreme Court Justice.

The Chicago School
A short history of the school.

When the Revolution was a Party: How Privatization was Invented in the 1960s
An article on the role of Ronald Coase in pushing the Chicago department of economics towards a thorough-going Laissez Faire attitude.

Encyclopedia of Law and Economics
The Encyclopedia of Law and Economics is a free online reference work that attempts to survey the whole law and economics literature in nearly 5,000 pages. Most entries contain two elements: a review of the literature, written by an authority in the field, and a comprehensive bibliography.

Law and Economics
An article in the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics by David Friedman.

Law and economics
A Wikipedia article about the movement that tries to apply the methods of economics to legal problems.

Monetarism
An historical and economic survey of probably the most famous product of the Chicago School.

The Triumph of Monetarism?
A detailed article by Brad De Long.

The New Traditional Chicago School
Study of economics theory and real-world empirical economics issues from views of traditional Chicago School.






© 2005 GeneralAnswers.org