E.
Roy Weintraub
Professor of Economics
|
|

Roy Weintraub was trained as a mathematician though his professional career
has been as an economist. In recent years his research and teaching activities
have focused upon the history of the interconnection between mathematics and
economics in the twentieth century. This work, in the history of economics, has
helped shape the understanding of economists and historians: his General
Equilibrium Theory (1985), Stabilizing Dynamics (1991), Toward
a History of Game Theory (ed.) (1992) and How Economics Became a Mathematical
Science (2002) have charted the transformation of economics from a
historical to a mathematical discipline. A former President of the History of
Economics Society, he is the author of seven books, editor of three others, and
has published numerous articles in professional journals and edited volumes.
His books have been variously translated into Japanese, Chinese, French, Greek,
Spanish, Hungarian, and Italian. Currently he is Associate Editor of the
journals History of Political Economy and the Economics Bulletin, and Co-Editor of the book series Science
and Cultural Theory.
He has held visiting positions at the University of Hawaii,
UCLA, the University
of Rome, the University of Bristol, and the University of Venice.
He has been one of the few economists honored by a fellowship year at the National Humanities Center.
At Duke he was Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Economics from
1972 to 1983, Chair of that department from 1983 to 1987, Acting Director of
the Institute of Statistics and Decision Sciences in 1987, Director of the
Center for Social and Historical Studies of Science from 1995-1999, and has
twice chaired the Academic Council. From 1993 to 1995, he served as Acting Dean
of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. He has served terms on the Advisory
Committee on Appointments, Promotion, and Tenure, the Academics Priorities
Committee, the Faculty Compensation Committee, and has chaired the President's
Advisory Committee on Resources. He served for many years as a pre-major advisor
and a teacher of first-year seminars, and has been Director of the Honors
Program for the Department of Economics, and Faculty Fellow in the former Edens Federation for Residential Life. In 1992 he won the
Howard Johnson Foundation Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching Award.
A native of the Philadelphia
area, Professor Weintraub received his A.B. degree in mathematics from Swarthmore College, and the M.S. and Ph.D. in
applied mathematics from the University
of Pennsylvania. He
joined the Duke University faculty in 1970 following a
first academic position at Rutgers
University. He lives with
his family in Durham.