Jaroslav Vaněk is an economist and Professor Emeritus of Cornell University known for his research on economics of participation and, in his earlier career, on the theory of international trade.
He graduated from a high-school in Prague, and left/emigrated shortly after the communist putsch of 1948. He received his diploma in statistics, mathematics and economics at the Sorbonne, and a postgraduate degree in economics at the University of Geneva. In 1955 he left for the US, where in 1957 he received his PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In 1964 he became professor of economics, and in 1969 of the international economics at Cornell University, where he directed from 1970 his program Participation and Labor Managed Systems, he also worked on strategies for its implementation in post-communist countries.
He was a visiting professor at the Belgrade's Institute of Economics, the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences and the International Institute of Social Studies in The Hague.
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