Lehrstuhl für Computational Economics
Adresse
Raum: 522
Templergraben 64/III
52062 Aachen
Persönliche Daten
Karin Knottenbauer studied French at the University of Nice (France), business administration at the University of Saarland (Saarbrücken, Germany), and economics at Hohenheim University (Stuttgart, Germany) where she received a degree in economics in 1991, followed by a doctoral degree in economics in 1999. From 2004 to 2005, she worked as a visiting professor in economics at York University, Toronto. Since 2005, Karin Knottenbauer has been a lecturer in economics in the School of Business and Economics at RWTH Aachen University.
Forschungsgebiete
- Macroeconomics
- Methodology and philosophy of economics
- History of economic thought
- Evolutionary economics
- Ethics and economics
Ausgewählte Veröffentlichungen
- Knottenbauer, K. (2013): Recent Developments in Evolutionary Biology and Their Relevance for Evolutionary Economics. In: Buenstorf, G. et al (eds.)., The Two Sides of Innovation – Creation and Destruction in the Evolution of Capitalist Economies, Springer, Heidelberg.
- Knottenbauer, K. (2009): Recent Developments in Evolutionary Biology and Their Relevance for Evolutionary Economics. In: Papers on Economics and Evolution, No. 0911, Max Planck Institute of Economics, and (2010), Papers in Evolutionary Political Economy PEPE (EAEPE).
- Kalmbach, P.; Franke, R.; Krämer, H.; Knottenbauer, K. (2005): Die Interdependenz von Industrie und Dienstleistungen, edition sigma, Berlin.
- Knottenbauer, K. (2004): Sektoraler Strukturwandel und Wachstum: Die Theorie von Luigi Pasinetti. In: Seiter, S. (Hrsg.), Neuere Entwicklungen in der Wachstumstheorie und -politik, Marburg: Metropolis Verlag, 101-144.
- Knottenbauer, K. (2000): Theorien des sektoralen Strukturwandels, Metropolis Verlag, Marburg.
- Knottenbauer, K. (2000): Sorting von Sektoren – eine evolutorisch-systemische Erklärung des sektoralen Strukturwandels. In: Walter, H.; Hegner, S.; Schechler, J.M. (Hrsg.), Wachstum, Strukturwandel und Wettbewerb, Lucius&Lucius, Stuttgart, 175-198.