Since the Global Financial Crisis, economics has been under greater public scrutiny, revealing a crisis in the discipline. This represented a potential turning point on how economics should be thought and taught. Heterodox economics has played a prominent role in these discussions revolving around new economics thinking and pluralism in economics. Yet, its identity, aspirations, and pedagogy remain underexplored, contested, and somewhat opaque. This volume brings together sixteen interviews with leading economists to understand what heterodox economics is. How and why does an economist become heterodox? In which way do heterodox economists see themselves as ‘different’ from mainstream economics? The interviews shed light on what problems heterodox economists perceive in the mainstream; elucidate the different contexts under which they operate in higher education; and provide insights on their ontology and methodology. The reader will also find answers to the following questions about the nature and state of heterodox economics: Do heterodox economists have particular intellectual journeys, motives and aspirations? Is this reflected in their teaching practices and strategies to achieve social change? What is the relation between heterodox economics and the humanities and arts? Appealing to a diverse audience, including philosophers, sociologists and historians of economic thought, the book will be of great interest to anyone keen to find out more about the internal discussions in the economics discipline.
Author(s): Andrew Mearman, Sebastian Berger, Danielle Guizzo
Series: Routledge Advances In Heterodox Economics Vol. 40
Publisher: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 313
Tags: Economics, Schools Of Economics, Radical Economics, Evolutionary Economics
1. Introduction
2. Sheila Dow
3. Fernando Cardim de Carvalho
4. William Darity
5. S. Charusheela
6. Karma Ura
7. Rolf Steppacher
8. Julie Nelson
9. Tony Lawson
10. Joan Martinez-Alier
11. Esther-Mirjam Sent
12. Gary Mongiovi
13. Anwar Shaikh
14. Victoria Chick
15. Edward Fullbrook
16. David Dequech
17. Ulrich Witt
18. Concluding thoughts
Bibliography
Index.