Before completing his Ph.D., Prychitko was also a junior fellow in the program on participation and labor-managed systems in the department of economics at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York (1988). He finished writing his dissertation research there, with some influence under the program's director, Jaroslav Vaněk.
Professional history
After receiving his doctorate, Prychitko conducted post-doctoral research on a Fulbright Grant in the Philosophical Faculty at the University of Zagreb, in Zagreb, Croatia (1989). While there he had also participated in several courses at the Inter-University Centre of Postgraduate Studies in Dubrovnik, Croatia, including Political Theory and Political Education—Anarchism: Community and Utopia. That course was celebrated as the first gathering in Yugoslavia of scholars of anarchism in forty or more years. During his stay at the Inter-University Centre, Prychitko also critically discussed the theory and practice of workers' self-managed socialism with several members of the Yugoslav Praxis School, including Zagorka Golubovic, Mihailo Markovic, Svetozar Stojanovic, and Rudi Supek.
After his return from Yugoslavia, Prychitko served as a faculty member in the department of economics at the State University of New York at Oswego, in Oswego, New York (1989–1997). During that time, he participated as a summer fellow in the faculty seminar on economy, values, and culture, at the Institute for the Study of Economic Culture, Boston University in Boston, Massachusetts (1992), a program directed by the noted sociologist, Peter Berger.
Prychitko was also a faculty affiliate in the program in philosophy, politics, and economics of the James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy, George Mason University (2001–2004). Additionally, he held the Cecil and Ida Green Chair in Economics at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas (2003–2004). Prychitko has been a faculty member in the department of economics at Northern Michigan University since 1997.[3]
Non-professionally, Prychitko was a college-radio blues disc jockey for several years, a volunteer position he held at radio stations WNYO in Oswego, New York and WUPX in Marquette, Michigan. He has since become a devotee of old-time fiddle music, and is one of a handful of Appalachian-style fiddlers in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
He lives in Marquette, Michigan with his wife Julie. They have four children, Sonja, Emily, Anthony, and Anna.
Bibliography
As author or co-author
Marxism and Workers' Self-Management: The Essential Tension (Greenwood Press, 1991) ISBN0-313-27854-7.
Markets, Planning and Democracy: Essays after the Collapse of Communism (Elgar, 2002) ISBN1-84064-519-9.
Producer Cooperatives and Labor-Managed Systems two volumes co-edited and introduced with Jaroslav Vaněk (#62 in the International Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Mark Blaug, series editor, Elgar, 1996) ISBN1-85898-189-1.
Ludwig von Mises and F.A. Hayek, "O Slobodnom Trzistu: Klesicni Eseji ("The Free Market: Classic Essays"). Croatian translations co-edited and introduced with Nevenka Cuckovic (MATE, 1998)
Why Economists Disagree: An Introduction to the Alternative Schools of Thought (State University of New York Press, 1998 ) ISBN0-7914-3569-5 (hardcover) and ISBN0-7914-3570-9 (paperback)
Market Process Theories two volumes co-edited and introduced with Peter Boettke (Elgar Publishing, 1998)
Selected articles
As author or co-author
"Beyond Equilibrium Economics: Reflections on the Uniqueness of the Austrian Tradition" (with Peter Boettke and Steven Horwitz), Market Process, 4 (2), Fall 1986
"The Welfare State: What is Left?," Critical Review, 4 (2), 1990
"Ludwig Lachmann and the Interpretive Turn in Economics: A Critical Inquiry into the Hermeneutics of the Plan," Advances in Austrian Economics, Vol I (1994)
"Expanding the Anarchist Range: A Critical Reappraisal of Rothbard's Contribution to the Contemporary Theory of Anarchism," Review of Political Economy, 9 (4), 1997
"Is an Independent Nonprofit Sector Prone to Failure? Toward an Austrian School Interpretation of Nonprofit and Voluntary Action" (with Peter Boettke), Conversations on Philanthropy Vol. I: Conceptual Foundations, 2004, Lenore Ealy ed.
"Communicative Action and the Radical Constitution: The Habermasian Challenge to Hayek, Mises, and their Descendants" (with Virgil Storr), Cambridge Journal of Economics 31 (2) March 2007
"Competing Explanations of the Minsky Moment: The Financial Instability Hypothesis in Light of Austrian Theory," Review of Austrian Economics, 23 September 2010