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International Economics
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Student Edition
Instructor Edition
International Economics, 5/e

Dennis R. Appleyard, Davidson College
Alfred J. Field, Jr., University of North Carolina -- Chapel Hill
Steven L. Cobb, University of North Texas

ISBN: 0072877375
Copyright year: 2006

About the Authors



Dennis R. Appleyard
Dennis R. Appleyard is James B. Duke Professor of International Studies and Professor of Economics at Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina. He grew up in Michigan, attended Ohio Wesleyan University for his undergraduate work (A.B. in Economics, 1961), and did his economics graduate work at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor (A.M., 1963; Ph.D., 1966). He joined the economics faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1966, and he taught at Chapel Hill from 1966-1989. He received the university-wide Tanner Award for "Excellence in Inspirational Teaching of Undergraduate Students" in 1983, and he held various administrative positions in the Department of Economics, including being Chairman of Graduate Studies, Director of the Honors Program, and Associate Chair. He undertook his current position at Davidson College in 1990. While at Davidson, he has been Chair of the college's International Education Committee for several years, and he directed Davidson's Semester-in-India Program in Fall 1996 and Semester-in-India and Nepal Program in Fall 2000.

Professor Appleyard has taught courses for undergraduates in economic principles, intermediate microeconomics, intermediate macroeconomics (also at the M.B.A. level), and money and banking. He has taught international economics and economic development at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. His research interests lie in international trade theory and policy and in the Indian economy. Published work, much of it done in conjunction with Professor Field, has appeared in the American Economic Review, History of Political Economy, Indian Economic Journal, International Economic Review, Journal of Economic Education, and Journal of International Economics, among others. He has also done consulting work for the World Bank, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (in Islamabad, Pakistan).

Alfred J. Field
Alfred J. Field is Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He grew up in Iowa and did his undergraduate and graduate work at Iowa State University. He joined the economics faculty at Carolina in 1967, and has held a number of administrative positions in the Department of Economics including two terms as Director of Graduate Studies and Director of the Senior Honors Program. He currently is serving as Associate Chair and Director of the Undergraduate Program in Economics. Field also is a member of the Board of Directors of the UNC-Chapel Hill Institute of Latin American Studies and the joint UNC-Duke Program in Latin American Studies. He recently received the Department JaeYeong Song and Chanuk Park Award for Excellence in Graduate teaching.

Prof. Field has done consulting work with a number of agencies including the World Bank, and the US Department of the Treasury. In addition, he worked two years in Peru with a USAID project, a year in Geneva, Switzerland with the International Labour Office, and most recently spent a month consulting in Chengdu, PRC, under the auspices of the United States Information Agency. Field feels that the combination of teaching, research and consulting in the area of international and development issues during the recent period of globalization has been a particularly rich and rewarding experience.

Stephen L. Cobb
Professor Cobb received his PhD in Economics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has served as a member of the Committee on Infrastructure and the Environment for the University Consortium on Free Trade. This committee assessed the impact of the North American Free Trade Agreement on the State of Texas and reported to the Texas Department of Commerce and the Governor's Office.

Professor Cobb has also testified about NAFTA to two Congressional subcommittees. He is Associate Professor of Economics and Chair of the department at the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas, and has won many teaching and research awards and recognitions. He is glad to join the text this edition and bring his expertise especially in the fields of economic education and transition economies, particularly those in Eastern Europe.


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