Studied law in Vienna.
Entry into the actuarial department of the Ministry of the Interior in connection with the establishment of workers' insurance.[1]
From 1890, after several years in practice, he taught economics and economic policy at the Technologisches Gewerbemuseum (Technological Trade Museum).[1]
Move to the Lower Austrian Chamber of Commerce and Trade in Vienna.[1]
Appointed full professor at the Technical University in 1904.[1]
From 1908 to 1921, senior advisory positions at the Ministry of Public Works and at the General Commissariat for the War and Transitional Economy.[1]
Technical staff member at the General Commissariat for the War and Transitional Economy.[1]
In 1904 Schwiedland succeeded Emanuel Herrmann as full professor of political economy at the TH Wien.[1]
Schwiedland was a participant in the Mises-Privatseminar in Vienna.
Eugen Peter Schwiedland in the context of the School as a whole — five generations, their teacher-student lineages, circles and collegial ties.
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