Pol. Econ.

Translations

Pol. Econ.

n abbr (=political economy) → économie f politiquepole dancer ndanseur/euse m/f de pole dancingpole dancing npole dancing m danse érotique autour d'une barre de strip-teasepole jump nsaut m à la perche
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
References in periodicals archive ?
POL. ECON. 893 (1990) (for a distinction between the three types of entrepreneurial activity); see generally Christopher J.
Pol. Econ. 497,498 (2003); Rafael La Porta et al., Judicial Checks and Balances, 112 J.
Pol. Econ. 1081 (1999); David Neumark & Patrick Button, Did Age Discrimination Protections Help Older Workers Weather the Great Recession?, 33 J.
Pol. Econ. 675, 676-78 (1988) (presenting a model of rational addiction characterized by a consistent plan to maximize utility over time); see also Gary S.
Pol. Econ. 211, 220-21 (1950) (asserting that economists can predict viable types of economic interrelationships induced by environmental change).
Pol. Econ. 1197, 1198 (1989); Payne, supra note 118, at 324.
Pol. Econ. 1063, 1090 (1974); Roberts, supra note 133, at 134.
(66.) See BRUCE YANDLE, BOOTLEGGERS, BAPTISTS AND GLOBAL WARMING 7-13 (Pol. Econ. Res.
MEINERS & BRUCE YANDLE, THE COMMON LAW: HOW IT PROTECTS THE ENVIRONMENT 3-23 (Pol. Econ. Res.
Pol. Econ. 385, 403 (1993) "The rational choice model provides the most promising basis presently available for a unified approach to the analysis of the social world by scholars from different social sciences.").
Pol. Econ. 226 (2008) (arguing that mutual advantage aspect of market transactions does not require coherent preferences) and Jayson L.
Pol. Econ. 373 (1967); Karsten Junius, Economies of scale: A survey of the empirical literature (Kiel, Working Paper No.