Michele Alacevich is professor of economic history and the history of economic thought at the University of Bologna. He is the author of The Political Economy of the World Bank: The Early Years (2009), coauthor of Inequality: A Short History (2018), and coeditor of Hirschman's The Postwar Economic Order: National Reconstruction and International Cooperation (Columbia, 2022).
The quietly vibrant and open-minded scholarship of Albert O. Hirschman, a mix of modesty and assertiveness about political economy, demography, the history of ideas, democracy and social movements, and analytical theory, deserves this book's bracing critical engagement. With a sympathetic yet tough-minded disposition, Michele Alacevich thoughtfully assesses the innovative and often inspiring achievements of Hirschman's field-stretching writings, as well as their lacunae and occasional overstatement. In so doing, his keen appraisal captures not just the range, depth, and verve of the writing but also the urgency of Hirschman's quest for grounded reform across a considerable range of geography and historical circumstances with an unremitting sense of realism. -- Ira Katznelson, author of <i>Fear Itself: The New Deal and the Origins of Our Time</i> This wonderful book offers new insights on a giant of the social sciences. Alacevich places Hirschman's work in intellectual context and traces its long arc of influence to our day. The book sheds new light not just on Hirschman's scholarship but also his iconoclasm, deliberate provocativeness, often frustrating focus on the particular rather than the general, and 'propensity for self-subversion.' It therefore helps us understand the sharp contrast between the brilliance of Hirschman's contributions and his outsider status in the academic disciplines he inhabited or trespassed in. -- Dani Rodrik, author of <i>Straight Talk on Trade: Ideas for a Sane World Economy</i> A superb examination of the vast legacy of a major 20th-century thinker. * Kirkus Reviews (starred) * As a historian, biographer Adelman was less attuned to Hirschman's subsequent career as an economic theorist - of development, democracy, capitalism, and commitment. Alacevich has provided a perfect complement, a study of the works and life of the author of the classic, Exit, Voice, and Loyalty. -- David Warsh * Economic Principles * The book serves as an excellent introduction and exegesis, yet also situates each episode of Hirschman's career within a broader, life-long stream of investigation. * Boston Review * A most valuable introduction to the evolution and character of Hirschman's theories, innovations, and insights. * Society *