This annotated bibliography of Professor Nicos E. Devletoglou’s writings from 1963 to the present covers a multitude of crucial issues and major developments ― a kind of world affairs kaleidoscope ― critically reviewed over more than half a century. Ranging from the unprecedented student uprisings in American and European universities in the sixties to consistently helping liberalize theoretical economics in terms of successive behavioural contributions in leading academic journals.
The traditional presumption of so-called perfect rationality, long entrenched in analytical economics, is formally discarded by a pragmatic introduction of less than perfect threshold-sensitive decision-making processes. As a result, new horizons have emerged capable of optimizing predictive and prescriptive economic policies ― also relevant to the social sciences as a whole.
The Professor’s pen has also been notably active in the interest of his native country. Significantly asking, for example, why a bulging Greek sovereign debt was not proportionately marked down before further serious damage was caused. Both to the economy and social cohesion in Greece, from a wreckless imposition of blind austerity by its foreign lenders ― with injury-and-loss estimated at €150b. Practically eliminating any semblance of growth in the country for nearly one decade.
Additional interventions in the international press, protesting the victimization of Greece, despite its full membership in the EU, are included in the bibliography.