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This collection includes:

  • Distribution of labor income in Turkey: Gender, urbanization and geographical region differences by Anwar Shaikh and Hale Kirer (unpublished work).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Folder label notation NA-24-22. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). An probability. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Even though men have higher average incomes than women, & whites have higher average incomes than African Americans, the distribution of income within groups are all essentially exponential. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Gender differences in income levels are much greater. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Would not be fundamentally altered. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Proposed. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). What does this mean? (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Check this. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). That. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). Concurrence of. (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Shaikh, A. (2016, April 12). When 2006 is the first available data why not follow it? (Unpublished manuscript note).
  • Jagielski, M., & Kutner, R. (2013). Modelling of income distribution in the European Union with the Fokker-Planck equation. Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 392(9), 2130–2138. Elsevier.
  • Săvoiu, G., & Iorga-Simăn, I. (2008). Some relevant econophysics' moments of history, definitions, methods, models and new trends. Romanian Economic Business Review, 3(3), 29–41. Romanian-American University.
  • Champernowne, D. G. (1953). A model of income distribution. The Economic Journal, 63(250), 318–351. Oxford University Press.
  • Gibrat, R. (1931). Les inégalités économiques. Librairie du Recueil Sirey.
  • Kalecki, M. (1945). On the Gibrat distribution. Econometrica, 13(2), 161–170. Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Shirras, G. F. (1935). The Pareto law and the distribution of income. The Economic Journal, 45(180), 663–681. Oxford University Press.
  • Mandelbrot, B. (1960). The Pareto-Lévy law and the distribution of income. International Economic Review, 1(2), 79–106. Wiley.
  • Di Matteo, T., Aste, T., & Hyde, S. T. (2003). Exchanges in complex networks: Income and wealth distributions. arXiv preprint cond-mat/0310544. Cornell University arXiv.
  • Drăgulescu, A., & Yakovenko, V. M. (2001). Exponential and power-law probability distributions of wealth and income in the United Kingdom and the United States. Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 299(1-2), 213–221. Elsevier.
  • Silva, A. C., & Yakovenko, V. M. (2005). Temporal evolution of the "thermal" and "superthermal" income classes in the USA during 1983–2001. Europhysics Letters, 69(2), 304–310. IOP Publishing.
  • Yakovenko, V. M. (2008). Econophysics, statistical mechanics approach to. arXiv preprint arXiv:0709.3662. Cornell University arXiv.
  • Shaikh, A., Papanikolaou, N., & Wiener, N. (2014). Race, gender and the econophysics of income distribution in the USA. Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 415, 54–60. Elsevier.
  • Dragulescu, A., & Yakovenko, V. M. (2001). Evidence for the exponential distribution of income in the USA. The European Physical Journal B, 20(4), 585–589. Springer.
  • Dragulescu, A., & Yakovenko, V. M. (2000). Statistical mechanics of money. The European Physical Journal B: Condensed Matter and Complex Systems, 17(4), 723–729. Springer.
  • Shaikh, A. (2016). Capitalism: Competition, conflict, crises. Oxford University Press.
  • Banerjee, A. (2008). Studies of complex systems in condensed matter physics and economics (Doctoral dissertation, University of Maryland). University of Maryland.

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