Heterodox Economics Newsletter Issue 245 — April 08, 2019 — web1 — pdf2 — Heterodox Economics Directory3

Last week I was invited to participate in a conference on ”Still rethinking? - The Need for Pluralism in Economics”4 organized by the Rethinking Economics Group at Greenwich University5 . This was a student-led conference and the organization of the sessions reflected that in a very inspiring way: more experienced scholars were invited to give broad and accessible introductions to various aspects of heterodox thought to make it easier for students to enter the respective, more specialized debates at the research frontier. In my view, this conference was a huge success and I was extremely honored to present some of my views6 on the future of pluralism in economics in a panel together with the living legend Victoria Chick7 .

Having said that, I wanted to emphasize that I also found Michael Kumhof8 ’s keynote lecture at said conference to be highly interesting as he tackled interparadigmatic con- flicts very directly. For instance, Kumhof showed how correctly modeling the inner work- ings of the financial sector (by means of assuming endogenous ) indeed makes a difference for the model outcomes. Moreover, he emphasized that research ”outside-the- box” is often not conducted, because it is associated with too much ”professional risk”. This assessment echoes what I often write on these pages about paradigmatic closure in economics (e.g. here9 ), but also relates to general questions of professional climate and concerns for diversity within economics.

On the latter point, I wanted you to notice that the AEA has recently released a letter to its members10 to provide a preliminary assessment and discussion of a survey on the professional climate in economics. As theoretical lop-sidedness and lack of diversity are often intrinsically related (I gave an example for such a case in my last editorial11 ), I think that these efforts by the AEA are noteworthy as they allow us to not only get a better understandings of the inner workings of academic economics, but they also facilitate a discussion on possible ’blind spots’ in current mainstream thought. And this is, at the end of the day, exactly what this Newsletter is all about ;-)

1http://www.heterodoxnews.com/n/htn245.html 2http://www.heterodoxnews.com/n/htn245.pdf 3http://heterodoxnews.com/hed 4https://stillrethinking.wordpress.com 5http://www.rethinkeconomics.org/re-group/rethinking-economics-greenwich/?fbclid= IwAR1mEz0Q-XapN6bOVztsCbAPxs7ds5cYs1xdyOon5jlpqVkVibV42K0VGzE 6http://heterodoxnews.com/HEN/attach/hen245/kapeller-rethinking.pdf 7https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_Chick 8https://michaelkumhof.weebly.com 9http://www.heterodoxnews.com/n/htn209.html 10http://www.heterodoxnews.com/n/htn245.html#art-17592186082167 11http://www.heterodoxnews.com/n/htn244.html

1 All the best,

Jakob

Contents

Call for Papers4 ”Economic Consequences of the Peace” Centenary Conference King’s College (Cambridge, Sept. 2019)...... 4 19th ECDG Mini Track Digital Governance in an Economic Context.....6 6th Shadow Economy Conference ”Tax Evasion and Economic Inequality” (Trento, July 2019)...... 7 Call for book chapters: Rethinking economics and the economy - Experiences in pluralist, socioeconomic teaching...... 8 Extended Deadline: 31st Annual EAEPE conference (Warsaw, Sept. 2019)..8 INET/YSI Pre-conference @ STOREP 2019 (Siena, June 2019)...... 9 International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education: Special Issue on ”Economics Education in Community Colleges”...... 10 Money, Power and Print: An Interdisciplinary Colloquium on the Financial Revolution (Dublin, June 2020)...... 13 URPE @ ASSA 2020 (San Diego, Jan. 2020)...... 14 Uneven and Combined Development Conference (Glasgow, Sept. 2019)..... 16 Young Economists Conference 2019: ”Understanding economic history for shap- ing the future” (Vienna, Oct. 2019)...... 17

Call for Participants 18 2019 EAEPE Summer School on ”Welfare Systems, Equitable Growth and Income Distribution” (Rome, July 2019)...... 18 2019 Summer School of Advanced Studies in the Reappraisal of the Surplus Approach (Rome, July 2019)...... 19 29th Annual Workshop of the Post-Keynesian Economics Society (London, May 2019)...... 20 New Summer School Course - Research methods in Political Economy (Manch- ester, July 2019)...... 20 Opportunity to submit comments about the ASE Journals...... 22 Post-Keynesian Economics meets International and Comparative Political Econ- omy (London, May 2019)...... 23 Summer School ”Theorie und Praxis ¨okonomischer Politikberatung” (Bochum, Sept. 2019)...... 23 Summer School on ”Repoliticising : contradictions, critique and al- ternatives” (Roskilde, July-Aug. 2019)...... 24 UNDP Visualization of Inequality data contest...... 26

2 Workshop on ”Current Research on the History of Economics in Switzerland and Beyond” (Zurich, June 2019)...... 27

Job Postings 27 Colorado State University, USA...... 28 Gallatin School at NYU, USA...... 29 Goldsmiths University of London, UK...... 30 Positive Money, UK...... 31 UMass Boston, USA...... 31 University College Dublin, Ireland...... 32 University College London, UK...... 33 University of Greenwich, UK...... 34 Universit´ede Montr´eal,Canada...... 36 Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU), Austria...... 37

Awards 38 Call for Nominations: EAEPE Kapp Prize 2019...... 38 Call for Nominations: EAEPE Simon Young Scholar Prize 2019...... 39 Call for Nominations: Pierangelo Garegnani Research Prize 2019...... 40 Winner Announcement: 2018 Warren Samuels Prize...... 40

Journals 40 American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 78 (2)...... 41 Cambridge Journal of Economics, 43 (2)...... 42 Competition & Change, 23 (2)...... 43 Economy and Society, 48 (1)...... 44 Forum for Social Economics, 48 (1)...... 45 Historical Materialism, 27 (1)...... 46 Industrial and Corporate Change, 28 (2)...... 46 International Critical Thought, 9 (1)...... 47 International Journal of Political Economy, 47 (3-4)...... 48 Journal of Economic Geography, 19 (2)...... 49 Metroeconomica, 70 (2)...... 50 New Political Economy, 24 (3)...... 52 Real-World Economics Review, 87...... 54 Review of International Political Economy, 26 (1)...... 55 The Review of Behavioral Economics, 6 (1)...... 57

Books and Book Series 57 Responses to Marx’s : From Rudolf Hilferding to Isaak Illich...... 57 Class After Industry - A Complex Realist Approach...... 58 Fascism and Dictatorship The Third International and the Problem of Fascism 58 Governance Beyond the Law: The Immoral, The Illegal, The Criminal..... 59 Growth and Distribution...... 59

3 Mass strikes and social movements in Brazil and India - Popular Mobilisation in the Long Depression...... 60 Minsky’s Moment - An Insider’s View on the Economics of Hyman Minsky.. 60 Money, Method and Contemporary Post-Keynesian Economics...... 61 Rosa Luxemburg - The Biography...... 61 Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy: A Twenty-First Century Agenda...... 62 Selected Essays of Nigel Harris: From National Liberation to Globalisation.. 62 The Economics of Adaptation and Long-term Relationships...... 63 The Future of Mining in South Africa: Sunset or Sunrise...... 63 The Reform of Europe - A Political Guide to the Future...... 64

Heterodox Graduate Programs, Scholarships and Grants 65 MSc Economics and MSc Global Economic Governance and Policy at SOAS University of London...... 65 Economic Policies in the age of Globalisation (EPOG) - International Master’s course...... 65 Frederic S. Lee Heterodox Economics Scholarship Fund...... 66 MA in Economics in the Economics and Society Stream of the Department of Economics at University of Manitoba...... 67 MS Finance at Saint Peter’s University in Jersey City, USA...... 69

Newsletters 69 economic sociology - the european electronic newsletter...... 70

For Your Information 70 A letter to Members of the AEA (on a recent survey on the professional climate in the profession)...... 70 Invitation to subscribe to Solidarity & Sustainability...... 73 Obituaries for Alan B. Krueger...... 73

Call for Papers

”Economic Consequences of the Peace” Centenary Conference King’s College (Cambridge, Sept. 2019)

9-10 September 2019 — Cambridge, UK

Paper proposals are invited for a conference to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the pub- lication of J. M. Keynes’s The Economic Consequences of the Peace. Keynes’s 1919 book is celebrated as a brilliant piece of advocacy by one of the 20th century’s pre-eminent

4 economists. But it is also an accurate prophecy of the consequences of a “Carthaginian peace,” as well as a plea for the type of global economic cooperation that later informed key aspects of reconstruction after World War II – including the Bretton Woods insti- tutions (which Keynes helped to design) and the Marshall Plan. With its description of resurgent nationalism in Europe and the breakdown of pre-WWI international economic integration, the book has great resonance today, given growing nationalism, the fraying of traditional alliances, and attacks on the multilateral institutions that have supported economic and financial globalization. Papers are solicited across a range of disciplines – including economics, history, political science, and international relations – with the unifying theme being Keynes’s classic polemic and how we view it today in the light of both the past century’s developments and current challenges.

Topics include, but are not limited to:

• The intellectual setting in 1919 and critiques of Economic Consequences

• How did Keynes’s experience in 1919 shape his views on the postwar international monetary system?

• Globalization before and after World War I

• Economic, social, and political implications of large international debt, especially as regards the implications of a high debt burden on income and wealth inequality, and social and political polarization

• Reparations and global capital-market instability in the interwar period

• Can multilateralism survive in an unbalanced world? Lessons from (the failures of) the Versailles system

• Roots of interwar inflations and Keynes’s views on monetary policy

• Cooperation, punishment, and retribution in international relations

• The transfer problem in international economics and its relevance for the dynamics of global imbalances

• The influence of Economic Consequences on organizing peace and reconstruction after international conflicts

It is hoped that the conference papers, together with an introduction by the conference organizers, will be published by a distinguished university press. Please send proposals (no more than 300 words) via email to [email protected] and obst-

12mailto:[email protected]

5 [email protected] .

Submission deadline: 26 April 2019

19th ECDG Mini Track Digital Governance in an Economic Con- text

24-25 October 2019 — North Nicosia, Cyprus

In the contemporary global context, digitalization has interesting impacts on the way countries are governed, but the relationship between digital governance and economic activities has not yet been fully assessed or understood. The previous problem of “pre- tence of knowledge”, i.e. governments pretending that they know what people want, changes to a problem of “plethora of knowledge”, i.e. governments do not know where to start understanding and addressing preferences. In this context, the impact of digital governance on the economic activities of individuals can be both a curse and a blessing.

The aim of this mini track is to deepen the analysis and development of the multilevel relation between digitalization, (digital) citizens and (digital) governments from an inno- vation economic perspective. We aim to better understand the evolution of this complex relation towards a new reality. Both researchers and practitioners are welcome to offer their perspectives on the role of digitalization and digital governance in an economic context.

Theoretical and practical papers are invited to this mini-track and potential topics in- clude, but are not limited to:

• Digital government vs. digital governance

• People and digital governance – understanding perceptions, designing action plans

• Emerging trends in digital governance and participation

• Empirical evidence from digital governance cases and their impacts on economy

• e-Participation, e-Democracy, IoT, smart cities, digital infrastructure and digital- ization of the sectors of economy

In the first instance a 300 word abstract is required which should be submitted using the online submission form14 .

13mailto:[email protected] 14http://www.academic-conferences.org/conferences/ecdg/ecdg-abstract-submission/

6 Please find further information here 15 and the original call here16 .

Submission deadline: 19 April 2019

6th Shadow Economy Conference ”Tax Evasion and Economic Inequality” (Trento, July 2019)

11-13 July 2019 — Trento, Italy

Most taxation systems imply a redistribution of resources aimed at reducing economic inequality in the society. Tax evasion represents a major source of inequality, irrespective of the redistribution goal in a country.

The 6th edition of the Shadow Economy Conference will investigate the extent to which fiscal policies deter tax evasion and the impact that fiscal policies have on social equity and perceived fairness.

Particular emphasis will be placed on the behavioural determinants of tax compliance as well as the role of institutions and norms. The organizers invite scholars from any field of social sciences (economics, psychology, sociology, etc.) as well as practitioners to submit their research. A list of potential topics includes, but is not limited to, the impact of tax reforms, the role of taxpayers’ fiscal literacy, the comparisons of different tax systems, the simplification processes of tax collection.

Prospective contributors are invited to submit extended abstracts (2-3 pages long). The conference welcomes theoretical, empirical, experimental, etc. submissions on any topic related to tax evasion and economic inequality. Extended Abstracts should be submitted electronically (PDF format only) following the online procedure17 .

Please find further information here18 .

Submission deadline: 1 May 2019

15https://www.academic-conferences.org/conferences/ecdg/call-for-papers/ecdg-mini-track/ 16http://heterodoxnews.com/HEN/attach/hen245/Mini-Track-on-Digital-Governance-in-an- Economic-Context.pdf 17http://webapps.unitn.it/form/en/Web/Application/convegni/Shadow2019 18https://webmagazine.unitn.it/evento/economia/54836/6th-shadow-economy-conference-tax- evasion-and-economic-inequality

7 Call for book chapters: Rethinking economics and the economy - Experiences in pluralist, socioeconomic teaching

The planned volume aims at collecting, portaying and sharing innovative economic ed- ucation examples at the university level, thereby fostering the growing discourse and practice of alternatives to standard-economic teaching. Submissions in german and english language shall align to the structure given in the CfP in order to allow for com- parison between different teaching innovations in form and content. Young scholars are encouraged to contribute. The volume will be edited by Janina Urban (FGW D¨ussel- dorf) and Lukas B¨auerle(Cusanus Hochschule, Bernkastel-Kues), submissions will be reviewed by a board assembled by professorial members and peers of the Association for socioeconomic education and research (ASEER).

Submissions should be sent to Janina Urban19 .

Please find further information as well as the original call here20 (only available in German).

Submission deadline: 30 June 2019

Extended Deadline: 31st Annual EAEPE conference (Warsaw, Sept. 2019)

12-15 September 2019 — Warsaw, Poland

The deadline for the submission of abstracts to the 31st Annual EAEPE Conference21 has been extended to 15 April. Abstracts can be submitted here22 .

Please find our most recent posting on this conference here23 .

Submission deadline: 15 April 2019

19mailto:[email protected] 20https://www.soziooekonomie-bildung.eu/cfp-i-wirtschaft-neu-denken-%E2%80%93- erfahrungen-aus-der-pluralen-sozio%C3%B6konomischen-hochschullehre 21https://eaepe.org/?page=events&side=annual_conference&sub=eaepe_2019_cfp 22https://emea01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F% 2Feaepe.org%2F%3Fpage%3Devents%26side%3Dannual_conference%26sub% 3Dabstract_submission&data=01%7C01%7Cengelbert.stockhammer%40KCL.AC.UK% 7C8a164e707098482c1b7f08d6a3b37a27%7C8370cf1416f34c16b83c724071654356%7C0&sdata= TQ88VqQ151g%2FNnLKTzrqYqYqJuuJCsxWrhYr14dbF6M%3D&reserved=0 23http://www.heterodoxnews.com/n/htn244.html#art-17592186081606

8 INET/YSI Pre-conference @ STOREP 2019 (Siena, June 2019)

25-27 June 2019 — Siena, Italy

The joint event aims at bridging the divide between economics and history, by revamping a methodological tradition of teaching and research, which desperately needs further development. Such tradition sees history as a fundamental instrument of economic analysis and the history of thought as a resource to draw upon in the discussion of both theoretical and policy oriented issues. The historical perspective in economics allows connecting the past and present plurality of approaches and is foundational to the advancement of new ideas and methods, tailored to the questions we want them to address. nterested young scholars can apply to four calls for abstracts, run by a variety of YSI Working Groups:

• CALL #124 — Innovative policy solutions among 21st century challenges Jointly organized by the Keynesian Economics Working Group25 , and the Economics of Innovation Working Group26

• CALL #227 — Feminist epistemology: bridging history of economic thought, philosophy of economics and feminist economics to tackle the new and emerging challenges in the economic research. Jointly organized by the Gender and Eco- nomics Working Group28 , the Philosophy of Economics Working Group29 , and the History of Economic Thought Working Group30

• CALL #331 — Political Economy of Europe in light of Economic Reforms, Fi- nancial Fragility, International Migration Fluxes and Political Shifts to Populism. Organized by the Political Economy of Europe Working Group32

24https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/inet-ysi-re-preconference-storep-2019/keynesian- economics-economics-of-innovation 25https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/keynesian-economics-working-group 26https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/economics-of-innovation 27https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/inet-ysi-re-preconference-storep-2019/gender- and-economics-history-of-economic-thought-and-philosophy-of-economics 28https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/gender-and-economics 29https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/philosophy-of-economics 30https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/history-of-economic-thought 31https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/inet-ysi-re-preconference-storep-2019/political- economy-of-europe 32https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/political-economy-of-europe

9 • CALL #433 — Pluralism in practice: the challenge of “doing” pluralist eco- nomics”. Organized by the States and Markets Working Group34

Abstracts should be submitted via the online portal which can be found by clicking on the link of the respective call.

Please find further information here35 .

Appliaction deadline for all calls: 26 April 2019

International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education: Special Issue on ”Economics Education in Community Colleges”

Guest Editors: Dr. Mark Maier, Glendale Community College, USA and Dr. Tim Thornton, Global Development and Environment Institute, Tufts University, USA

A significant amount of economic instruction occurs in community colleges, yet this important sector is under researched and poorly understood. This special issue aims to remedy this situation by providing a resource for teachers, policymakers and other interested individuals. The issue will highlight achievements, innovative approaches and the unique possibilities within the sector, as well as conceptualise and document relevant challenges and issues. We have developed some obvious themes below. In addition, we will consider papers that can contribute to our understanding of this sector. Accordingly, potential authors are encouraged to contact the guest editors to discuss and explore particular lines of research in advance of the submission deadline.Subject CoverageSuitable topics include, but are not limited, to the following:

Theme 1: The fundamentals of the community college sector

1. What are the demographics of community college economics instruction?

• Number, gender, race, ethnicity, age, etc. of students

• Number, gender, race, ethnicity, degrees, etc. of instructors

2. The historical development of community colleges. Has their role in higher education changed? Have the basic demographics changed? What will the typical community college look like in the future?

33https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/inet-ysi-re-preconference-storep-2019/call-4- states-and-markets 34https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/workinggroup/states-and-markets 35https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/inet-ysi-re-preconference-storep-2019

10 3. What are the current community college trends? For example:

• Rising tuition or in some cases free or reduced tuition

• Increased use of part-time instructors

• Increased use of online instruction

• Emphasis on career technical education

• And others?

4. What economics topics are of greatest interest to community college students? What economics courses are most commonly taught? If there is a significant difference, and if so, why?

5. How can community college instruction contribute to increased diversity in the eco- nomics major and the economics profession?

6. What can economists learn from how progressives have supported community college instruction in other disciplines? For example:

• Successful efforts to increase diversity

• Successful efforts to meet student interest in equality and sustainability

• Successful efforts to find champions from the research community to support un- dergraduate instruction

Theme 2: Economic pluralism in community college courses

7. How can community college education be reconceptualised in order to support new thinking in economics?

8. What is the potential for community colleges as a central driver of pluralism in economics?

• Are there unique resources within the community college sector?

• Do transfer rules hinder or enhance pluralist approaches and/or interest in eco- nomics?

9. What is an appropriate and effective pluralist curriculum for community college students who take only one economics course?

11 10. What alternative courses or programmes promote economic pluralism? What ped- agogies can support economic pluralism at community colleges?

Theme 3: Teaching resources in community colleges

11. What is the impact of dominant textbooks on community college economics instruc- tion? Can heterodox and non-mainstream alternatives make a difference?

12. What other curricular resources are utilised in community colleges?

13. What is the impact of legislation mandating zero-cost, open-access textbooks on economics instruction at community colleges?

14. What is the impact of corporate-funded and federal government resources on the community college economics curriculum?

15. Describe and discuss effective pedagogies for teaching economics in community colleges.

16. What lessons can be learnt from other nations?

Notes for Prospective Authors

Submitted papers should not have been previously published nor be currently under consideration for publication elsewhere. (N.B. Conference papers may only be submitted if the paper has been completely rewritten and if appropriate written permissions have been obtained from any copyright holders of the original paper). All papers are refereed through a peer review process. All papers must be submitted online. To submit a paper, please read our Submitting articles page.

If you have any queries concerning this special issue, or would simply like to explore the idea of submitting a paper please email the Guest Editors:

• Dr. Mark Maier36

• Dr. Tim Thornton37

Submission deadline: 30 September 2019

36mailto:[email protected] 37mailto:[email protected]

12 Money, Power and Print: An Interdisciplinary Colloquium on the Financial Revolution (Dublin, June 2020)

4-6 June 2020 — Dublin, Ireland

This colloquium, the ninth in a biennial series and the first to be held in the Republic of Ireland, invites scholars from a variety of disciplines to enrich their mutual understanding of the intersections between public finance, politics, and print during a period some scholars call the ‘financial revolution’ from around 1688 to 1776. The subject matter has been broadened slightly for 2020 to include the histories of personal credit and central banking.

Papers for the colloquium should be grounded in one of the following five general areas:

• the operations, theoretical and practical, of institutions such as banks (including central banking), joint-stock companies, public debt, and/or paper money

• the effect of diverse understandings of emerging financial instruments and theo- ries upon contemporary political debates as demonstrated in the literature and legislative debates of the period

• the influence of the successes and failures of specific legislative and/or financial proposals on the development of political and economic programs throughout this period

• the impact of literature and legislative debates of the period on people’s perceptions of the financial revolution and/or its political consequences

• the evolution of personal credit and attitudes towards it, and their impact on the course of the financial revolution

‘Money’ is used broadly to cover the core economic components of the financial rev- olution. ‘Power’ is taken to mean the contest between royalty, aristocracy, gentry, merchants, financiers, and other formal or informal groupings for influence and stand- ing. ‘Print’ refers to how the interplay of money and power were explained, analysed, explicated, and misrepresented (whether deliberately or not) in newspapers, pamphlets, novels, plays, illustrations, and other printed material intended for circulation.

In all cases, consideration should be given to the degree to which the print material under discussion shaped the development of institutions and the implementation of financial policies, and influenced political discourse.

Although primarily focussed on the ‘financial revolution’ in Britain (in the widest ge- ographical sense), the colloquium welcomes papers which comparatively explore public

13 finance in Britain alongside that of the Continent. Colloquium participants tend to adopt an empirical, rather than a statistically driven, approach to historical enquiry.

We recommend that all participants read selected excerpts from classic texts on the ‘financial revolution’ as well as excerpts from more recent works that deal with the ‘credible commitment’ thesis. (Such readings will be assigned and made available in advance of the meeting.) Reading selections from these classic and recent works of scholarship on our topic help us to gain a shared basis for dialogue, and underpin our comparative discussions.

Papers will be distributed in advance and presented in two-hour sessions, at which all colloquium participants are present. Presenters will have five minutes to summarise their papers. The remainder of each session will be given over to questions and discussion, in which the goal is to enrich our mutual understanding by eliciting insights from all of the disciplines represented at the table. Authors are therefore expected to write for a non-specialist audience, avoiding jargon, making concepts from their own discipline readily accessible to all those present, seeking to identify areas of general interest, and focusing on questions on which scholars of various disciplines will have something to contribute.

Papers should be written in English. Graduate students and emerging scholars are particularly encouraged to submit proposals.

Initial expressions of interest of 250 words or fewer, questions, and submissions should be directed to:

Charles Larkin38 Anne Murphy39 Natalie Roxburgh40 Adrian Leonard41

Please find the original call here42 .

Submission deadline: 15 May 2019

URPE @ ASSA 2020 (San Diego, Jan. 2020)

3-5 January 2020 — San Diego, USA

38mailto:[email protected] 39mailto:[email protected] 40mailto:[email protected] 41mailto:[email protected] 42http://heterodoxnews.com/HEN/attach/hen245/CFP_MPP_Dublin_2020.pdf

14 URPE invites proposals for complete sessions and individual papers for the URPE at ASSA annual meeting. We welcome proposals on radical political economic theory and applied analysis from a wide variety of theoretical perspectives.

Proposals for complete sessions are encouraged and should include the session title, a brief description of each paper, and the names, institutional affiliations, and email addresses of the chair, discussants, and presenters. Proposals for sessions should con- tain four papers. If you are proposing a complete session, please try to arrange to have discussants for your papers and a chair for your session. As the organizer of this ses- sion, you are responsible for conveying administrative information to session members, including confirmation that the session has been accepted, the time and location, and the deadlines for distributing papers.

Proposals for individual papers should include the title, the abstract, and the author’s name, institutional affiliation, and email. Individual papers that are accepted will be assigned to sessions and each session will have an assigned organizer. Individuals whose papers are accepted may also be asked to serve as a discussant in a different session at the meetings.

We regret that high quality individual papers may be turned down due to the inability to place them in a session with papers with similar themes. The number of sessions we can have is limited by ASSA, and we regret that high-quality session proposals may also have to be turned down.

You should receive word from URPE about the decision on your session or paper by late June. The date and time of sessions are assigned by the AEA at the end of August.

Please note that anyone who presents a paper (but not the chairs or discussants) must be a current member of URPE at the time of submission of the paper or panel proposal. Submissions are checked, anyone not current with their dues is notified, and then proposals are deleted if membership is not made current. Membership information is available by clicking here.43

Applications for individual papers should be made to URPE@ASSA Individual Paper Proposals,44 or for complete session submissions to URPE@ASSA Complete Session Proposals.45 If you have questions or problems with the online submission, please

43https://urpe.z2systems.com/track//servlet/DisplayLink?orgId=urpe&emailId= cd359a48e9c6c79f69978ccee5d5744acm15214cd3&&linkId=391&targetUrl=https://urpe.org/ ?page=about_urpe&side=join_urpe_renew_urpe_annual_membership 44https://urpe.z2systems.com/track//servlet/DisplayLink?orgId=urpe&emailId= cd359a48e9c6c79f69978ccee5d5744acm15214cd3&&linkId=400&targetUrl=https://form. jotform.com/90344770322149 45https://urpe.z2systems.com/track//servlet/DisplayLink?orgId=urpe&emailId= cd359a48e9c6c79f69978ccee5d5744acm15214cd3&&linkId=394&targetUrl=https://form. jotform.com/90344674678166

15 contact email the URPE National Office.46

For questions about the meetings, please contact the URPE at ASSA coordinators Paul Cooney47 and Paddy Quick.48

See the American Economic Association49 website for general logistical information about the conference and our past programs page50 for more information on sessions at the conference.

Submission deadline: 1 May 2019

Uneven and Combined Development Conference (Glasgow, Sept. 2019)

5-7 September 2019 — Glasgow, UK

As recently as the early 1990s, anyone predicting that Trotsky’s ’law’ of uneven and com- bined development (UCD) would soon become a key theoretical reference point across several academic disciplines would have been treated with a great deal of scepticism. Yet, less than three decades later, UCD is regularly deployed in the fields of interna- tional relations, historical sociology, political economy, social geography and–perhaps most surprisingly–world literature. Not since the vogue for Gramsci’s notion of hege- mony in the 1970s and 1980s has a concept from the classical Marxist tradition enjoyed such widespread academic diffusion. Controversies have of course abounded: adherents have disagreed over whether UCD is a trans-historic or trans-modal process, or whether it is one which can only be found in the era of industrial capitalism; critics have alleged that UCD is simply a more sophisticated form of Eurocentrism; Trotskyist activists have complained–with some justification–that UCD has been detached from the political con- text in which it was first deployed. There have been some events focusing on specific aspects of UCD, notably one on culture at the University of Warwick in 2014; yet, in spite of the rapidly multiplying literature there has not been an international event bringing together representatives from all the relevant areas of scholarship to engage in inter-disciplinary discussion.

46mailto:[email protected] 47mailto:[email protected] 48mailto:[email protected] 49https://urpe.z2systems.com/track//servlet/DisplayLink?orgId=urpe&emailId= cd359a48e9c6c79f69978ccee5d5744acm15214cd3&&linkId=396&targetUrl=http://www. vanderbilt.edu/AEA/Annual_Meeting/index.htm 50https://urpe.z2systems.com/track//servlet/DisplayLink?orgId=urpe&emailId= cd359a48e9c6c79f69978ccee5d5744acm15214cd3&&linkId=393&targetUrl=https://urpe.org/ ?page=urpe_activities&side=urpe_at_the_assas&sub=past_urpe_at_assa_programs

16 This conference will finally provide such an opportunity. Although its main focus will be on UCD, it will also be open to discussion of two important related topics, the earlier theory of /uneven development/ and the strategy of /permanent revolution/, the conditions for which UCD was of course originally intended to explain. The organisers are pleased to announce that keynote addresses will be given by Robert Brenner (on uneven development in the history of capitalism) and Justin Rosenberg (on the relevance of UCD to understanding contemporary issues like Brexit and the rise of Trump): other keynote speakers will be announced over the coming months.

We are inviting academics, public intellectuals and political activists interested in the debates over UCD and related areas–including those who are critical of the concept, or at least sceptical of its explanatory power–to participate in the conference. If you simply want to attend and take part in the discussion, you can complete the on-line registration form which will be issued in June. But if you are planning to submit a paper, please send it to Neil Davidson51 . You should aim for a maximum of 250 words for individual papers and of 500 words for panels: panels should not involve more than three speakers.

These proposals don’t have to be formal ’abstracts’–we just want to know what you would like to talk about for scheduling purposes. We’re not going to insist that proposals fit into pre-decided ’streams’: we’ll instead see what subject areas participants want to discuss and work from there. The subjects of papers/panels could be anything from case- studies of UCD in particular nation-states or regions, to the contemporary relevance of permanent revolution, to the impact of UCD on the emergence of Modernism–the only criteria for the acceptance of proposals is that they engage with the themes of the conference and have something interesting to say about them. We’re as open to the extension of existing arguments as we are in the unveiling of new positions. In particular, if you are PhD student working on UCD-related themes but have not yet published, this would provide you with an opportunity to present in an interested and supportive environment. Unfortunately, we can only pay for keynote speakers to attend, but the cost of registration will be relatively low: £20 (employed f/t)/£10 (student, employed p/t, unemployed or retired).

Submission deadline: 10 May 2019

Young Economists Conference 2019: ”Understanding economic history for shaping the future” (Vienna, Oct. 2019)

1-2 October 2019 — Vienna, Austria

Today’s social, financial, and economic challenges in capitalism call for responses by both policymakers and economists. The multitude of answers economists have to these most

51mailto:[email protected]

17 pressing questions reflects the plurality of economic theory, differences in the assessment of the present as well as the influence of political interests. Whether an economic the- ory becomes dominant in shaping society depends on who supports and promotes its ideas. Economic History and the History of Economic Thought are thus indispensable to understand the contest of paradigms.

The recent financial and systemic crisis emphasizes the need for a thorough discussion of the role of economic history for the profession; the impact of ideology and power in shaping economic theory; and empirical studies examining the past as well as preparing for future challenges. This encompasses contributions from all subfields of economics (for example macroeconomics, labor economics and economics of inequality) as well as related social sciences.

Abstracts of max 1 page should be submitted via e-mail to [email protected]

Please find the original call as well as further information here53 .

Submission deadline 31 May 2019

Call for Participants

2019 EAEPE Summer School on ”Welfare Systems, Equitable Growth and Income Distribution” (Rome, July 2019)

1-5 July 2019 — Rome, Italy

The EAEPE Summer School is open to PhD students and early-career researchers work- ing in particular in the field of institutional and evolutionary analysis, with a special focus this year on structural change, aggregate demand, institutions and economic de- velopment. Teachers will address these important topics from different perspectives and approaches. In the spirit of pluralism characteristic of the EAEPE, many Research Areas are relevant: human development, environment-economy interactions, method- ology of economics, institutional history, comparative economics, transition economics, institutional change, innovation and technology, and labour economics.

More generally, contributions from all fields using institutional, multidisciplinary ap- proaches are welcome. Lectures by internationally- renowned scholars will be given in the morning, while afternoons will be devoted to presentations by advanced PhD stu-

52mailto:[email protected] 53https://wien.arbeiterkammer.at/yec2019

18 dents and early- career researchers, who will thus benefit from comments and suggestions from experts in the field.

PhD students can apply by uploading their CV using the online submission form. Ad- vanced PhD students and early-career researchers who would like to present their work can submit their proposal or paper along with their CV using the online submission form54 .

For information and contact: Pasquale Tridico55

Please find further information as well as the original call here56 .

Application deadline: 18 May 2019

2019 Summer School of Advanced Studies in the Reappraisal of the Surplus Approach (Rome, July 2019)

5-13 July 2019 — Rome, Italy

The Summer School welcomes applications by PhD students at any stage of their PhD as well as post-doc researchers. Candidatures by undergraduate and Master students will be considered only if their profile is exceptionally strong.

Participants will be introduced to the analyses of the Classical economists and to the modern research conducted within the reappraisal of their theoretical framework. The activity will embrace different topics, ranging from the theory of and distribution to the study of economic growth, also dealing with applied analyses and policy issues. A selected number of papers by young scholars will be presented and discussed in a specific session.The registration fee is 150AC and includes teaching materials and lunches. Centro Sraffa grants scholarships for a small number of participants, who will be awarded free Summer School registration and, if possible, a lump sum contribution to travel and staying expenses.

To apply, fill out the application form 57 and send it to [email protected]

Please find further information here59 .

54https://eaepe.org/?page=events&side=summer_school&sub=summer_school_application 55mailto:[email protected] 56https://eaepe.org/?page=events&side=summer_school&sub=eaepe_summer_school 57http://www.centrosraffa.org/public/c2b92b5f-edd8-42d5-a7be-c8071c3c5e49.docx 58mailto:[email protected] 59http://www.centrosraffa.org/conferenceandseminarsdetails.aspx?id=73

19 Application deadline: 4 May 2019

29th Annual Workshop of the Post-Keynesian Economics Society (London, May 2019)

29 May 2019 — London, UK

The 29th PKES annual workshop will take place at Goldsmiths, University of London (Room LG01 Professor Stuart Hall Building New Cross, London, SE14 6NW) at 10.00 - 18.00 on Wednesday 29 May. Please find the provisional programme is here.60

Speakers include Aurelie Charles, Andreas Joseph, Sue Konzelmann, Maria Nikolaidi, Ozlem¨ Onaran, Walter Paternesi Meloni, Hector Pollitt, Sara Reis and Ron Smith.

Tea and coffee will be provided and we would be delighted if you could join us for dinner afterwards (at own expense).

If you are interested in participating, please register by sending an email to: [email protected] .

New Summer School Course - Research methods in Political Economy (Manchester, July 2019)

1-5 July 2019 — Manchester, UK

This five day workshop will equip scholars with the methodological tools for acquiring empirical knowledge in political economy and the theoretical tools for questioning the validity and limits of the knowledge produced.

It will begin with a brief exploration of the ontological and epistemological foundations of knowledge production, and then feature a series of intense workshop on different methodological approaches and techniques. This includes the quantitative approaches, such as Stata regression analyses and NVivo coding, as well as qualitative approaches, such as social network analysis and the conducting of semi-structured elite interviews. These sessions entail a combination of lectures, practical work and feedback. The course will then conclude with the utilisation of these techniques in your own specific research projects, presentations of your work, and a discussion of methodological strengths and weaknesses in each case.

60http://www.postkeynesian.net/event/29032019-29th-pkes-annual-workshop/ 61mailto:[email protected]

20 Course Leaders

Prof. Wendy Olsen. Professor of Socio-Economics and head of the Department of Social Statistics, University of Manchester.

Dr. Daniel Bailey. Post-Doctoral Research Fellow of the Political Economy Centre, University of Manchester.

Other Contributors

• Prof. John O’Neill. Professor of Philosophy and Hallsworth Chair in Political Economy, University of Manchester.

• Dr. Louise Thompson. Senior Lecturer in Politics, University of Manchester.#

• Dr. Paul Tobin. Lecturer in Politics, University of Manchester. In 2017, he was named both ’The Best Humanities Lecturer’ and ’The Most Inspiring Lecturer’ at Manchester by the University of Manchester Students’ Union.

• Dr. Claire Pierson. Lecturer in Politics, University of Liverpool.

• Ms. Lina Khraise. PhD candidate in Development Policy and Management, De- partment of Social Statistics, University of Manchester.

Pricing

• Students - £600

• University of Manchester Staff - £600

• Other attendees - £900

For more information on our summer school please click here62 , or to book a place on this course please visit our estore.63

Bursaries

There are a small number of subsidised places for PhD students, reducing the cost of a course to £300 (with the exception of Introduction to Longitudinal Data Analysis using R which will be reduced to £375). To apply or for further details please email contact

62https://www.methods.manchester.ac.uk/connect/events/summer-school-2019/courses/ 63https://estore.manchester.ac.uk/short-courses/faculty-of-humanities/school-of-social- sciences/methodsmanchester/methodsmanchester-summer-school-research-methods-in- political-economy

21 [email protected] for an application form confirming the course you are applying for. Bursary applications may be made to [email protected]

Full details about the methods@manchester Summer School are available at the meth- ods@manchester website66 .

Registration deadline: 26 June 2019

Opportunity to submit comments about the ASE Journals

IM TEXT WIRD AM ENDE AUF EIN LISTING OF TOPICS VERWIESEN, DAS DANN NICHT AUFFINDBAR IST.

TK: MEINTEST DU DIESE?

The terms of the editors of the Association for Social Economics’ two journals, the Review of Social Economy and the Forum for Social Economics, are up at the end of 2019. The contract between the ASE and the editors states that an evaluation will be completed prior to either a renewal of the contracts or searches for new editors, and a committee has been formed to do this review and make recommendations to the ASE Executive Council.

If you have comments you would like to share with the committee about how you think the current editorships have worked out, or your concerns for the future, we would be happy to hear them. Please email them to Julie Nelson67 , or contact Julie Nelson by email to make arrangements for a phone call. We will keep your comments confidential and/or anonymous, if you prefer. A listing of some specific topics of interest is below.

Criteria for Evaluation

1. Scope: Is the journal furthering social economics?

2. Logistics: Are submissions and publications being handled in an organized, timely, and appropriate way?

3. Budget: Are funds the journal receives for administration and promotion of the journal being used appropriately?

4. Inclusivity: How successful has the journal been in encouraging a diversity of voices by gender, race, nationality, length of time in the profession, and/or disci-

64mailto:[email protected] 65mailto:[email protected] 66https://www.methods.manchester.ac.uk/connect/events/summer-school-2019/ 67mailto:[email protected]

22 pline, in both editorial and author roles?

Post-Keynesian Economics meets International and Comparative Political Economy (London, May 2019)

15 May 2019 — London, UK

The workshop explores the mutual relevance of post-Keynesian economics (PKE) and Comparative Political Economy (which prominently includes Varieties of Capitalism, VoC) and International Political Economy (IPE). Several authors have recently high- lighted potential synergies. Baccaro and Pontussen (2016) have argued that existing VoC analyses lack an adequate treatment of demand formation and proposed a to ground VoC analysis on the PKE analysis of demand regimes. In response Soskice and Hope (2016) sympathise with the need for stronger demand side analysis, but advocate a foun- dation in the New Keynesian three equation model (as in Carlin and Soskice’s textbook) as preferable to PKE. Blyth and Matthijs (2017) argue that IPE lacks in its treatment of the macroeconomy and highlight the distinction of Keynesian (full employment) and neoliberal (price stability) policy goals in two different macroeconomic policy regimes. Stockhammer (2016) argues that PKE analysis differs from VoC in its analysis of de- mand regimes and its analysis of finance, which includes endogenous money creation and financial instability.

The workshop has a mix of speakers with PKE and an IPE/CPE background. The aim is to explore the possible areas of synergy, overlap and tension between PKE, CPE and IPE. We expect the debate will focus on the Euro crisis, differences in demand regimes and the impact of financialisation.

Please find further information as well as a link to register here68 .

Registration deadline: 15 May 2019

Summer School ”Theorie und Praxis ¨okonomischer Politikber- atung” (Bochum, Sept. 2019)

5-6 September 2019 — Bochum, Deutschland

The Chair of Macroeconomics at Ruhr-University Bochum, the Netwerk Okonomische¨ Bildung und Beratung (NOBB¨ e.V.) and the Chair of Economics of Innocation and Structural Change at the University Bremen are delighted to announce the Summer

68https://www.kcl.ac.uk/events/event-story?id=766692d4-eb41-4d25-a7a4-2225c04e0993

23 School ”Theorie und Praxis Okonomischer¨ Politikberatung”. The summer school will take place from the 5th till 6th September 2019 at the Ruhr-university Bochum (Ger- many) and provides participants with fundamental knowledge in theory and practice of policy consulting. The classes will be held in German.

Call for applications

Das Netzwerk Okonomische¨ Bildung und Beratung (NOBB¨ e.V.) organisiert die diesj¨ahrige Summer School Theorie und Praxis ¨okonomischer Politikberatung“. Die Summer School ” findet vom 5. bis 6. September 2019 an der Ruhr-Universit¨atBochum statt und richtet sich an Master-Studierende und Promovierende. Die Summer School soll den Teil- nehmer/innen aufzeigen, wie sie an der Schnittstelle zwischen Wissenschaft und Politik t¨atigwerden k¨onnen. Zum einen wird ein Uberblick¨ ¨uber Formate der Politikberatung gegeben. Zum anderen erhalten Sie Einblicke und Hinweise aus der Praxis von Politik- beratern und Praktikern (u.a. ehemaligen Mitgliedern des Bundestages).

Bewerbungen

Interessierte Promotions- und Masterstudierende sind herzlich eingeladen, ihre Bewer- bung, bestehend aus einem Motivationsschreiben (max. 1,5 Seiten) und einem CV an tom bauermann69 zu schicken.

Weitere Informationen finden Sie hier70 . Falls Sie Fragen haben, wenden Sie sich bitte an Tom Bauermann.71

Anmeldefrist: 30 April 2019

Summer School on ”Repoliticising capitalism: contradictions, critique and alternatives” (Roskilde, July-Aug. 2019)

29 July - 9 August — Roskilde, Denmark

Course outline

The summer school brings together a faculty of critical political economy scholars (Ca- tia Gregoratti, Lund University, as well as Jesper Jespersen, Bernd Bonfert, Laura Horn and other scholars from RUC) for an in-depth course on heterodox and critical po- litical economic perspectives. It offers a unique opportunity to directly engage with original economic texts/source material and to explore core dimensions of the critique of (neo)classical economic theory and contemporary perspectives on global capitalism. The

69mailto:[email protected] 70https://www.noebb.de/summer-school-politikberatung-2019/ 71mailto:[email protected]

24 focus of the course is explicitly pluralist, encouraging students to widen their horizon for critical thinking and methodological reflection

The first part of the course ‘Economic Thought from Oikos to Economics’ traces the history of economic ideas with an emphasis on critical and heterodox approaches. The individual sessions will introduce students to carefully selected primary literature from classical, critical and heterodox strands of economic thought. The objective is to under- stand the varied historical effect of these theories on both the object of study and the discipline itself. This will provide the foundation for further elaboration on contempo- rary issues such as debt, unemployment, inequality, and growth.

The second part of the course ‘Contemporary Challenges, Critiques and Alternatives’ addresses present and pressing issues, through the lens of critical and heterodox political economy. This theoretical and applied pluralism will provide insights on issues such as e.g. development, austerity politics and climate change. Through the employment of recent critiques, the second section of the course hence offers potential pathways towards different conceptualisations and alternatives to “the economy” as we know it.

Why do this summer school at Roskilde University?

The ‘Repoliticizing Capitalism’ course at Roskilde University is the only one of its kind in Scandinavia. It offers a rare opportunity to engage with primary economic texts as well as leading scholars within heterodox economics and critical political economy. The course will contribute substantially to students’ understanding of economics, its history and usages. Moreover the specific focus on alternatives and critiques enables students to move beyond orthodox conceptualizations of the economy.

RUC is a critical university, with an explicit focus on creating experimental and inno- vative learning experiences and knowledge. It has a unique history of student activism and legacy of critical thought that still leaves an impression on university environment. The summer school at RUC not only provides an opportunity to take part in a vibrant academic community, but you will also be presented with the possibility of directly engaging with professors, lecturers and researchers leading within their fields. RUC’s dedication to student participation, problem solving and innovative learning approaches will positively add to the credentials of any student.

Located at the city of Roskilde and a 25-min train-ride from Copenhagen, the cultural, social, economic and political happenings are inside the reach of its green surroundings.

Date

The course is offered from 29 July - 9 August 2019. The application deadline will be announced in due time; it’ll probably be around late April/early May for international participants.

25 Course format

The course takes place over a two week period and comprises a range of activities. Each week there are four days of teaching (seminars and workshops), and one day of self-study.

The seminars presents a variety of critical approaches, drawing on the readings and the lecturers’ own work. The core element of the summer school is active learning- oriented workshops, in which the participants discuss the theoretical, methodological and empirical issues raised in the lectures. There will also be opportunities for participants to present their own work to the group. Self-study periods, facilitated by the enabling learning environment at the Roskilde university campus offer an opportunity for students to improve their knowledge and understanding of theoretical perspectives and current affairs. Social activities include film screenings, an evening discussing economics and science fiction, as well as a barbecue.

Language

The course is taught in English.

Admission and Fees

The summer school is available for master students as well as PhDs (course requirements differ according to which level participants are, more details available on the course website in due time, or contact Laura).

The course carries 10 ECTS; admission for international students (EU/EEA) is 560AC. Master students enrolled at a Danish university do not have to pay fees, but need to provide a forh˚andsgodkendelse/pre-approval from their university.

Accommodation is available on campus, prices and further details are available upon request.

Please find further information here.72 For further questions please contact Laura Horn73 .

Application deadline: 25 June 2019

UNDP Visualization of Inequality data contest

Inequality in human development – deep imbalances in the opportunities and choices people have – goes beyond income recognizing the dynamic and complex interactions

72https://ruc.dk/en/summer-school-repoliticising-capitalism-contradictions-critique- and-alternatives 73http://[email protected]

26 between inequalities in education, health, voice, access to technology, and exposure to risk among many other dimensions that affect individual well-being.

The Human Development Report Office (HDRO) is organizing a data visualization chal- lenge and would like to invite a broad cross-section of students, young data users, data scientists and data visualization developers to share their interpretation of inequality in human development using a novel and thought-provoking illustration of data. Partic- ipants are encouraged to push the boundaries and go beyond traditional data sources and existing concepts.

Please find further information here74 .

Submission deadline: 4 June 2019

Workshop on ”Current Research on the History of Economics in Switzerland and Beyond” (Zurich, June 2019)

4 June 2019 — Zurich, Switzerland

Harro Maas and Catherine Herfeld will organize the second one-day workshop entitled ’Current Research on the History of Economics in Switzerland and Beyond’ on June 4, 2109 at the University of Zurich and would hereby like to warmly invite you to participate.

As in 2018, the primary goal of this workshop is to strengthen the network of scholars in Switzerland who work on topics in the history of economics, methodology of economics, and economic history. The workshop setting will be rather informal to allow for active scholarly exchange. We will also have a program with a set of wonderful speakers, who will present their current research project. Please find the program here75 .

While participation is free, please register by sending an email to Catherine Herfeld76 .

Registration deadline: 15 May 2019

Job Postings

74http://hdr.undp.org/en/data-visualization-challenge-2019?fbclid=IwAR2hj_ LpqNKKg4PMvafjvPUKSnbFau7L8y1jAQVXnAeOvPb4DAKnPLCvbAY 75http://heterodoxnews.com/HEN/attach/hen245/Zurich_Workshop_Program.pdf 76mailto:[email protected]

27 Colorado State University, USA

Job title: Post-doc specializing in the racial, ethnic and/or gender dimensions of poverty and inequality

The Department of Economics at Colorado State University invites applications for a two-year post-doctoral research associate who specializes in the racial, ethnic and/or gen- der dimensions of poverty and inequality. The successful candidate will develop research analyzing how race, ethnicity and/or gender determine economic opportunities and con- straints or the organization of economic systems, and the consequences for poverty and inequality. Scholars with a wide array of sub-specialties can find ample opportunities for mentorship and collaboration among Department faculty, particularly in areas that ex- plore the social, economic or environmental aspects of inequality. This position includes a 1-1 teaching load each academic year, with courses to be determined based on candidate interests and departmental needs. Those with the capability to contribute to our course offerings in gender and the economy, racial inequality and discrimination, poverty and the welfare state, or environmental justice and sustainability are especially encouraged to apply, as are those interested in improving diversity and inclusion in introductory economics education. Ph.D. in economics or a related field must be completed by the time the appointment begins on 16 August 2019. The Department of Economics strives to create and support a diverse and inclusive environment appreciating and valuing the uniqueness of the individual. We value intellectual diversity and embrace a pluralistic approach to scholarship and teaching that reflects the broader society.

Interested applicants must submit a cover letter describing their suitability for the po- sition, CV, research and teaching statements, a job market paper or example of recent research (to be uploaded to the writing samples slot) and the names and e-mail ad- dresses of three (3) professional references who will be contacted to submit letters of recommendation. References will be contacted immediately upon submission of an ap- plication and will receive an email with a link to submit their letter. Please inform your references that letters must be uploaded by April 26, 2019 for full consideration of a complete application. Letters should be addressed to: Post-doc Search Chair. Routine inquiries should be directed to Search Support at CLA [email protected] . To view the full posting announcement and apply, submit applications electronically here.78

Application deadline: 19 April 2019

77mailto:[email protected] 78http://jobs.colostate.edu/postings/64850

28 Gallatin School at NYU, USA

Job title: Visiting Assistant Professor of Economic Thought

The Gallatin School of Individualized Study at New York University (NYU) seeks to fill a Visiting Assistant Professor position to commence on September 1, 2019. We are seeking candidates with expertise in either the History of Economic Thought; Heterodox Economics; or the History of Capitalism. The ideal candidate will be able to teach creative and thoughtful courses that explore the intellectual history of economics as a discipline, or that provide a social and institutional framework for thinking about the history of capitalism. We are particularly interested in attracting a candidate who could teach some courses about the likes of any of the following: Adam Smith, Karl Marx, John Maynard Keynes, Alfred Marshall, Joan Robinson, Amartya Sen and/or other scholars who have been influential in the development of economic thought, and who can teach in a way that exposes undergraduate students to the texts of these thinkers. The candidate would be welcome to teach other topics-oriented courses in addition to the above; examples might include courses such as a course about the history of money, a gender and the economy course, or a course drawn from the candidate’s research.

The teaching load for this position is four courses per year (two in the fall and two in the spring). In addition, this position will serve as an adviser to approximately 13 students.

Founded in 1972, NYU Gallatin is a liberal arts college of 1,500 undergraduate students and 200 graduate students that are part of New York University. Its innovative B.A. and M.A. programs in individualized study encourage students to develop an integrated, interdisciplinary program of study that combines courses taken in the various schools of NYU with independent studies, internships, and Gallatin’s own interdisciplinary semi- nars, writing courses and arts workshops. The School emphasizes excellent teaching, top level faculty research, intensive student advising and mentoring, and a unique combina- tion of program flexibility and academic rigor. To learn more about the Gallatin School, please visit our website at gallatin.nyu.edu79 .

Qualifications: Candidates may have an academic background in history, economics, political philosophy or sociology. Ph.D. in hand by time of appointment; demonstrated excellence in teaching at the university level; a strong record of research and writing.

Applicants are required to submit a letter of application, curriculum vitae, a writing sample (of 15-20 pages), three letters of recommendation, a statement of your teaching philosophy, and a brief description of three ”dream courses” you would like to teach.

79https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__gallatin.nyu.edu_&d=DwMFaQ& c=WO-RGvefibhHBZq3fL85hQ&r=FPO7svpMKWxUFDGXoVafMu9nllPDAJ9adaXTWqizrPI&m= sBdlVq3YuT8woCqFg6CSXKXZPQ48IdGNybuVktLZnhs&s=Kllg8J7A40zTUYmTPIK2Bks1064MKyjL0sR70MUeVkA& e=

29 All application materials must be submitted electronically here.80

For questions, please contact Gallatin’s Office of Human Resources at [email protected]

Application deadline: 24 May 2019.

Goldsmiths University of London, UK

Job title: Lecturer in Economics (Three Posts)

The Institute of Management Studies (IMS) combines innovative and world-renowned 4* research in one of the most creative universities in the UK with the expertise of leading academics in the fields of economics, entrepreneurship, strategy, business psychology, innovation, leadership development, and marketing. We are now seeking three full-time Lecturers in Economics to join our expanding group in this area; they will contribute to the development, teaching, and high-impact research output of economics in the IMS.

You will have a good first degree and PhD (or equivalent) in an area related to economics and an internationally recognised portfolio of interdisciplinary research, with relevant publications, in relation to economic theory and/or applied economics. Preference will be given to applicants who have completed their PhD; those who have submitted at the point of application could be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Applications are especially encouraged from academics who have experience in teaching (i) microeconomic theory from a history of economic thought perspective; ii) the histori- cal evolution of credit and the market economy; and (iii) quantitative economics/econometrics with appropriate statistical software packages and the methodology of statistics for economists. Knowledge of the context and methodology of applied techniques and an ability to creatively combine mainstream and heterodox approaches in teaching and research are essential.

Please find the original posting as well as a link to apply here82 .

Application deadline: 8 May 2019

80https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__apply.interfolio.com_61845& d=DwMFaQ&c=WO-RGvefibhHBZq3fL85hQ&r=FPO7svpMKWxUFDGXoVafMu9nllPDAJ9adaXTWqizrPI& m=sBdlVq3YuT8woCqFg6CSXKXZPQ48IdGNybuVktLZnhs&s=AU4gHlwiu8mpW_aAAM_ I749K7GR54FHoD9yrUQsTY0M&e= 81mailto:[email protected] 82https://jobs.gold.ac.uk/vacancy/lecturer-in-economics-three-posts-383931.html

30 Positive Money, UK

Job title: Economist

Positive Money is a fast-growing organisation that combines the activities of a think- tank, pressure group, and international movement. Its mission is to restore democratic control and transparency over the creation of money. Current monetary policy and the money system cause a wide range of economic, social and environmental problems; most notably house price bubbles, high levels of debt, and rising inequality. Its vision is a money and banking system that supports and contributes to a fair, democratic, and sustainable economy.

About the role

Positive Money’s ideas on reform of the banking system have been advocated by the Financial Times’ chief economics commentator, Martin Wolf, and cited by influential economists including former Bank of England governor, Mervyn King and former Fi- nancial Services Authority chairman Adair Turner. Its team has developed a significant body of work looking at the nature of the current monetary and banking system, its con- sequences for various social, economic, and environmental goals, and the potential for progressive reform. Positive Money is a thought leader on money and banking reform. As a member of the research team, the economist would contribute to an ambitious re- search agenda with a significant impact on economic policymaking. The economist will help to identify how to broaden Positive Money’s analysis of the dysfunctional money and banking system, and of the role of central banking in developed economies following the financial crash.

Applicants should fill out the application form 83 and send it via email to recruit- [email protected]

Please find the full job posting as well as further information here85 .

Application deadline: 6 May 2019 (8am)

UMass Boston, USA

Job title: Visiting Assistant Professor (Macroeconomics and Monetary Eco- nomics)

83http://positivemoney.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Economist-Positive-Money- application-form.docx 84mailto:[email protected] 85https://positivemoney.org/vacancies/

31 The Department of Economics at UMass Boston seeks to hire for a visiting assistant professor position for one-year appointment starting September 1, 2019.

This role supports our growing cohorts of undergraduate majors in the areas of macroe- conomics and monetary economics. We are interested in candidates who include an international comparative approach, heterodox political economy, feminist approaches, applied policy analysis, and/or innovative methodologies in their research.

Qualifications:

• Successful teaching record and the capacity to contribute to undergraduate general education and the economics major.

• Evidence of successful teaching with diverse students.

• Completed Ph.D. by August 31, 2019.

• Evidence of progress towards an excellent scholarly record is required.

Please submit a letter of application (explains how your work complement the hetero- dox nature of the Department), curriculum vitae, sample of written work, evidence of teaching effectiveness, and the names and email addresses of three references to Adugna Lemi86 .

Review of applications began: 2 April 2019

University College Dublin, Ireland

Job title: AD Astra Fellows

UCD is a research-intensive global university with purpose, drive and ambition. To contribute to the achievement of our mission and vision, we wish to hire additional faculty who share our ambition and our values: excellence, creativity, collegiality, engagement, integrity and diversity.

UCD has developed a new Central Pool Academic Appointments initiative that is aligned with the University Strategy key objectives:

1. Increase the quality, quantity and impact of our research, scholarship and innova- tion.

2. Provide an educational experience that defines international best practice.

86mailto:[email protected]

32 3. Consolidate and strengthen our disciplines.

4. Conduct strong interdisciplinary research and education in important areas of na- tional and global need.

5. Attract and retain an excellent and diverse cohort of students, faculty and staff.

6. Build our engagement locally, nationally and internationally.

7. Develop and strengthen our University community.

The UCD Ad Astra Fellows programme is one part of this initiative. Approximately 65 appointments will be made at Lecturer/Assistant Professor grade each year target- ing high potential early-stage academics. Applications are invited across all academic disciplines represented in UCD. Excellence, creativity and the interest and capacity to engage across disciplines are underpinning values.

The UCD Ad Astra Fellows programme is extremely competitive and applicants are expected to have research outputs in the pipeline that will readily transition to research activity within UCD.

Please find further information as well as a link to the application portal here87 .

Application deadline: 22 April 2019

University College London, UK

Job title: Post-Doctoral Research Associate

The Faculty of Arts and Social Science (FASS) are seeking to appoint a highly motivated Post-Doctoral Research Associate to work on a project titled ‘Between protection and exclusion: Separated child migrants’ care relationships and caring practices.’ The project is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council.

This project has three work packages:

1. To investigate how separated child migrants in England make sense of care rela- tionships and caring practices; both the care they provide and receive,

2. To investigate how adult stakeholders involved in the care of separated child mi- grants in England make sense of and value care relationships and caring practices and

87http://www.ucd.ie/adastrafellows/

33 3. To undertake an analysis of the cultural political economy of care for and by separated child migrants.

The successful candidate will play a full role in the design, execution and dissemination of the project. Specific duties will mainly focus on work packages 2 and 3 and involve analysing critical political economy of the immigration-welfare nexus in the UK as it per- tains to separated child migrants’ caring practices and care relationships. This includes media representations, policy, and the distribution and organisation of resources such as mapping state, market and civil society actors, networks and resources flows. Other responsibilities will include, but not be limited to, conducting semi-structured interview- ing with individuals/focus groups, qualitative data analysis, updating and maintaining research project websites and engaging in social media and communications activities and dissemination activities.

The successful candidate should have completed a PhD in critical political economy or a relevant field of expertise such as cultural political economy, feminist political economy, economic sociology or other disciplines bearing on the study of markets, politics and economic development that could be applied to care, migration and/or childhood.

Full post details are available here88 . For further enquiries, contact one of the project leads Dr Sarah Crafter89 or Dr Rachel Rosen Dr Rachel Rosen90

Application deadline: 25th April 2019 (12 noon)

University of Greenwich, UK

The University of Greenwich Business School is seeking applications for three lectureships in business management. This is an opportunity for a permanent appointment in a vibrant network research environment provided by the newly established Networks and Urban Systems Centre. The Faculty of Business is based in the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich – a UNESCO World Heritage site. The University of Greenwich has a strong commitment to diversity and internationalism, and this is reflected in our staff and student profiles.

Job title: Lecturer in Business and Management

As part of our on-going development strategy, the University of Greenwich Faculty of Business is seeking a Lecturer in Business and Management.

88http://www.open.ac.uk/about/employment/vacancies/post-doctoral-research-associate- psychology-15874 89mailto:[email protected] 90mailto:[email protected]

34 The Department of Systems Management and Strategy has a wide portfolio of under- graduate programmes in the general area of business studies with specialisations in strategy, decision making, project management, operations, sustainable development and responsible planning and management. The Department also runs a Masters in Logistics and Supply Chain Management and an Executive MBA programme. There are strong research teams within the department which provide research that is of sig- nificance to businesses, the society and environment, urban ecosystems, and circular economy. A successful applicant would form part of a research group, contributing to the REF submission and overall research activity.

The position offers opportunities for research and teaching at undergraduate and post- graduate levels and enables an ambitious candidate to play an important role in the shap- ing of the future development of the department’s approach to its curriculum design. We are particularly looking for candidates that enjoy teaching quantitative subjects. Applicants need to be confident in developing inspiring course materials and learning activities within a blended learning environment and providing excellent student care.

Please find the original posting as well as a link to apply here91 .

Job title: Lecturer in Logistics Management

The Department of Systems Management and Strategy has a wide portfolio of under- graduate programmes in the general area of business studies with specialisations in trans- port and logistics, procurement and supply chain, strategy, decision making, project and operations management. The Department also runs a Masters in Logistics and Supply Chain Management and an Executive MBA programme. There are strong research teams within the department which provide research that is of significance to businesses, the so- ciety and environment, urban ecosystems, and circular economy. A successful applicant would form part of a research group, contributing to the REF submission and overall research activity.

The position offers opportunities for research and teaching at undergraduate and post- graduate levels and enables an ambitious candidate to play an important role in the shaping of the future development of the department’s approach to its curriculum de- sign. We are looking for applications from candidates that enjoy teaching a variety of subjects, including quantitative techniques. Applicants need to be confident in de- veloping inspiring module materials and learning activities within a blended learning environment and providing excellent student care.

Please find the original posting as well as a link to appliy here92 .

Job title:Lecturer / Senior Lecturer in Business Systems and Management

91https://jobs.gre.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=1961 92https://jobs.gre.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=1960

35 The Department of Systems Management and Strategy has a portfolio of undergrad- uate and postgraduate programmes in the areas of business strategy, project manage- ment, small business development, sustainable and responsible planning and manage- ment, business ecosystems and innovation in business environments. The Department also runs an Executive MBA programme. There are strong research teams within the department which provide research that is of significance to businesses, the society and environment, urban ecosystems, and circular economy. A successful applicant would form part of a research group, contributing to the groups REF submission and overall research activity.

The position offers opportunities for research and teaching at undergraduate and post- graduate levels and enables an ambitious candidate to play an important role in the shaping of the future development of the department’s approach to its curriculum design. Applicants need to be confident in developing inspiring course materials and learning activities within a blended learning environment and providing excellent student care.

Please find the original posting as well as a link to apply here93 .

Should you have any queries regarding any of the three postings please contact theHR Recruitment Team94 .

Application deadline for all postings: 17 April 2019

Universit´ede Montr´eal,Canada

Job Position: PhD Position in Human Geography

This studentship represents an exciting opportunity to develop a project rooted in one of the following three areas: (1) food studies; (2) labour geography; (3)critical political economy. The successful candidate will be supervised by S´ebastienRioux, Assistant Professor and Canada Research Chair in the Political Economy of Food & Well-Being.

Remuneration: Stipend: guaranteed minimum of $17,500 per year for 3 years (up to a third of the stipend will be in the form of research/teaching assistantship). The candidate will be expected to apply for provincial and/or federal research support. Additional funds for research and conference attendance are available.

The candidate is expected to begin in September 2019 or in January 2020 at the lat- est.Why Geography at Universit´ede Montr´eal?

93https://jobs.gre.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=1819-E-E 94mailto:[email protected]

36 • To study in a strong, multidisciplinary department with international collabora- tions across the Americas as well as parts of Asia, Africa and Europe;

• To develop a unique comprehension of the field by being positioned at the cross- roads of both French and English geography;

• Universit´ede Montr´eal is ranked among the top three francophone universities in the world and among Canada’s top three research universities;

• PhD candidates can write their dissertation in English;

• Montr´ealwas recently named world’s best student city;

• Thanks to a historically strong student movement, tuition fees for both Qu´ebec students and non-Qu´ebec Canadian students are substantially lower for PhD stu- dents.

Eligibility: Preference will be given to candidates with a Master’s degree of high standing in geography or in a related field (e.g. sociology, labour studies, politics). Otherpreferred skills and experiences:

• Training or experience in critical social science research theories and methodologies;

• Evidence of strong communication, problem solving and time-management skills;

• Ability or willingness to study and work in both French and English.

How to apply:Interested candidates should apply by sending a cover letter, summary of the proposed project, CV, transcripts, writing sample and the names of two references to S´ebastienRioux95 .

Application deadline: 1 May 2019

Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU), Austria

Job title: Postdoctoral researcher on Climate-related financial risks for Eu- rope

The Institute for Ecological Economics at the Vienna University of Economics and Busi- ness (WU) is currently inviting applications for a postdoctoral researcher position (2 years; starting in October 2019).

95mailto:[email protected]

37 The post holder will contribute to the activities of the CASCADES project (Cascad- ing climate risks: Towards adaptive and resilient European societies), funded by the European Commission under the H2020 framework. The main aims of the research con- ducted at WU will be to: i) develop an assessment of the exposure of the European macro-financial system to extra-European climate risks; ii) identify appropriate changes in business models, portfolio strategies and public policies to reduce the exposure to risks and make use of climate-related opportunities. We particularly welcome applica- tions from researchers with strong analytical, numerical and coding skills; especially in the field of network analysis, complex systems and climate economic modelling.

All the information available here96 . For further queries, please write to Emanuele Campigliot97 .

Application deadline: 2 May 2019.

Awards

Call for Nominations: EAEPE Kapp Prize 2019

Submissions should be papers published in a scholarly journal on a theme broadly in accord with the EAEPE Theoretical Perspectives, consisting of a minimum of 5000 words and normally not exceeding 12000 words, published online or in print 2018 (e.g. no forthcoming or in press articles are accepted).

Only one entry per author will be considered. At least one of the co-authors must be a paid-up EAEPE member in the year of the competition, and at least one co-author of each submission must commit to attend EAEPE’s 2019 annual conference.

Any member of the EAEPE Council, or Trustee of the Foundation for European Eco- nomic Development (FEED) serving at any time from 1 January of the year before the year of competition to 1 July of the year of the competition inclusive, shall be ineligible to participate, including as a coauthor.

A single PDF file should be sent to Irene Monasterolo. 98 Sending your entry to the wrong address will result in a delay that may make you miss the deadline. EAEPE will not be held responsible for submissions that are dispatched to the wrong address.

The EAEPE Council will judge submissions by the end of May at the latest. The Council reserves the right not to award a prize if the entries are below the required quality.

96https://www.wu.ac.at/en/careers/careers-at-wu/current-job-openings/ 97mailto:[email protected] 98mailto:[email protected]

38 For more information please write to Irene Monasterolo99 , Prize officer within the EAEPE Council.

Submission deadline: 30 April 2019

Call for Nominations: EAEPE Simon Young Scholar Prize 2019

EAEPE invites young scholars to submit their accepted conference paper for the annual EAEPE-Simon Young Scholar Prize competition.

Submissions should be papers accepted for the Annual EAEPE Conference. Applicants must attend and present their paper at the conference. Only applicants are eligible, who have not reached their 35birthday in the year of the prize award, or who are within 3 years after completion of their PhD.

Co-authored papers are eligible if all coauthors meet the age/seniority requirement above. In any case, every author may submit no more than one paper, single or co- authored.

In the case of two or more co-authors, at least one-of the authors has to be a paid-up EAEPE member in the year of the competition. Any member of the EAEPE Council or Trustee of the Foundation for European Economic Development (FEED) serving at any time from 1 January of the year before the year of competition to 1 July of the year of the competition inclusive shall be ineligible to enter.

A PDF should be sent to the EAEPE Prize Competition Coordinator: Irene Monas- terolo100 , Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU). Sending your entry to the wrong address will result in a delay that may make you miss the deadline. EAEPE will not be held responsible for submissions that are dispatched to the wrong address.

The EAEPE Council will judge submissions in time for the Annual EAEPE Conference. The Council reserves the right not to award a prize if the entries are below the required quality.

The EAEPE-Simon Young Scholar Prize will be awarded at the Annual Conference dinner.

Submission deadline: 30 April 2019

99mailto:[email protected] 100mailto:[email protected]

39 Call for Nominations: Pierangelo Garegnani Research Prize 2019 he Centro di Ricerche e Documentazione “Piero Sraffa”, in accordance with the wishes of the family and with their financial support, establishes for the sixth year a Prize in memory of Pierangelo Garegnani of the amount of AC 3,000 (before tax), aimed at young scholars who are engaged or plan to engage in research in economic analysis along the lines of the work of Pierangelo Garegnani.The Prize is awarded to researchers in the field of Economics who are attending a PhD course, or have defended since 2014 their PhD thesis, in Italian or foreign Universities.

Details on the submission process can be fond in the original call.101

Please find all details on the Centro Sraffa website. 102

Submission deadline: 10 June 2019

Winner Announcement: 2018 Warren Samuels Prize

The 2018 Warren Samuels Prize goes to Isabella Maria Weber of Goldsmiths, University of London, and Gregor Semeniuk of SOAS, University of London, have been awarded the 2018 Warren Samuels Prize for Interdisciplinary Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology for their co-authored paper ”American Radical Economists in Mao’s China: From Hopes to Disillusionment.” The prize winner is chosen each year by RHETM’s editorial board from among the papers approved for publication in the journal throughout the year. Previous winners include Gabriel Oliva, Tom Stapleford, and Wade Hands. The award carries a $1,000 stipend.

Isabella and Gregor’s paper will appear in the next volume (37A) of Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, to be published in May, as part of a symposium on the 50th anniversary of the Union for Radical Political Economics, guest edited by Tiago Mata. The volume also includes a general-research contribution from Mauro Boianovsky and a series of essays from prominent scholars reflecting upon Boianovsky’s essay, in addition to a new archival piece about John R. Commons from the papers of Alvin Hansen, edited and introduced by Malcolm Rutherford.

Journals

101http://www.centrosraffa.org/public/bb26467b-7002-4c2e-b940-7a64fc1e66b3.pdf 102http://www.centrosraffa.org/prizeandscholarshipdetails.aspx?id=10

40 American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 78 (2)

Clifford W. Cobb: Editor’s Introduction: Religion and the Shaping of Normative Economics103

Robert H. Nelson: Economic Religion and the Worship of Progress104

Carol Frances Johnston: A Protestant Rethinking of Economics for a Healthier World105

Charles M.A. Clark: Catholicism and Economics: Towards a “Deeper Reflection on the Nature of the Economy and its Purposes”106

103http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2FwJewBTV1YgCUB-2FoaoxPJ2bAW0tEkBsw09WgaJktQ3313uznyS83ybyKy8ElKiTjqdQrNMkQiCD9ZjDayZwZqAk- 2BbtK-2BUuUnJw99KdWeWjUsU-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E- 2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRxXBUR9cdcV0ZEbxVslTPpPfv5invbXFJyqsX7vhc0K3pz- 2BN7gxPZSFe8yA8fnQ2rODLL4cIJP490mqBUg2rtIbr6owg36wkNu4nEGFvFLsL7kUOqgoY8rTHrVWfp1rbdm3SbDEYYKXhT3syFw4TyCe6IGoyFEd2- 2FqU4ZsxWurlYtKwUDp83XrufAWxC0qnUDs-3D 104http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2FwOat2oFBvtOnjh-2FFE4TSxYtDejhhf2fmq4BPL5qMRs6e714T9WOXKjeVcNfHFGuDYI4S79FeBwisIWwewLv- 2Fv-2FjdkJed600yJffPRuBxsSf0-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E- 2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRxXuafau1KIRKjjuXoEUVeYfN9yN- 2BtczpNlri9ykbtUBoNsj6zpLO-2F10WCXSel7P8bj5-2BBEpIDe-2Be-2FcXC014zS7gttC60Tto- 2F9vH6iakXWXN63vqdjkVnZ-2FlK-2BPmgmNXLYBWPbNAaktYF4Bu-2BT-2BeN0LMFsE5AaFMJzfLmeki6joB8TBo9FpSBwZsCZolu8ek3o- 3D 105http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2FwcrIwxVkB5MqCmpTNwEkioIv-2BNigBT-2BsmIT6iX9ITqim8r71zVlYskxvqoHDZW2LEqlV69RW74L10PimYb- 2BK-2BjHVb0nLI-2Bmpt2w5EVmMzRZo-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E- 2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRxLYtrvjIIzrORFKexw5ZTaKEWZ6mxGhvj- 2F0WJ6oKH7RyAxxP-2B5xEHeNafWrhAfyPR7UtbodSPAzyqdZlrdzeMVKpPFqj3mPmJbauRpEPh4X-2F- 2FuDxlc2Y0DogdSODVJBJUhrhUvDdy1161U3QI26vCTW-2F-2Fb-2FdFKRAeU8eCsl3lXWQRkND8VQBwfbfk9w- 2F-2FcqRE-3D 106http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2Fwa-2B6ydmJlTKiCgdTB-2BBaIppmA53g3pMyswUqRsukTCRGJgRgVBA9gVIh4Cx6i3ZCAb- 2FCOSsGwXLOd90F891q0xXvcMuPLI-2Fm-2FNCiMtKHX-2BfU-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD- 2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRy- 2B-2FWLizYui0ke9XDet2Z4P2BRBy-2FETcufMFjksQEtpnSO6oZ-2FWlPoM9wQoyuwj8poyY0FMED4Td399LfjtAuKUMDlBfrrBKw- 2BJZ3JbAXVmSGL5-2FeblVvpwoedjUlAbZhlfeX-2FYqvyAKaHb9ZaJKacPWMkZyRBAZp3FDCJZ4oE9zaanxisfC8RJJKbSeRneFIo-

41 Asad Zaman: Islam’s Gift: An Economy of Spiritual Development107

Sungmoon Kim: The Political Economy of Confucian Harmony: A Xunzian Vision108

Wolfgang Drechsler: The Reality and Diversity of Buddhist Economics109

Cambridge Journal of Economics, 43 (2)

William Quinn: Technological revolutions and speculative finance: evidence from the British Bicycle Mania110

Christian Pfeifer and Gesine Stephan: Why women do not ask: gender differences in fairness perceptions of own wages and subsequent wage growth111

Ferran Portella-Carb´oand Oscar´ Deju´an: Trade Imbalances and Fiscal Policy in the Eurozone: An Analysis of Economic Interrelations with a Global Supermultiplier Input-

3D 107http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2Fwafnyk0zqEojbkifmmT4-2BKM-2FXysACf0ZzeMhMZ6PB-2FemPq6F415mHep024X4G5Xq1bS8Yo06Qn8YLej4AlL9RCyeJXH5AOMHJpHqNwHi43HM- 3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF- 2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRy22jHDd4MVlX- 2FOpeBNwwZTxpDVFmlKNRp7XfE9mQofpB2Anpn1qlCtaIKMY4I-2F48i3xThs4SKXxtXguh- 2FKMstyM4xekOlDz4UfuiL4CfYZKD5jF66BlXHtvQq0ldgygljv46yXNQXrzbbVXkxMQGL8sXKQclFQWXfQs2S7W4iDDMIiQaiZm6jYDutDpUW8M04- 3D 108http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2FwUO2YqKAoi9kwCxy86BF7pl5CXqtVOOuWZRt3QHXxNN5vAJbUOOD4rgDsUb4FBdL1RZD3NVU738giSJ- 2FLCW18xwVvO7i0caE9xh02aeDPZAI-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E- 2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRxLPCPK33Dz6KJfEkIJm0fxII2fGOehbTzfEYijsNeNQO9d1HbjeWTmASsCxuBoQ1iJEHP8Ruj2lMdxyGj9NXAvKRr65P9N9dZ4- 2FteJ87K2UB31bYdm0WO0ZgXdLPUkaMJvNxHdSvPIMzzbqSCYqgvUy57aT-2FT8aqLiS6l1BX- 2BrChXhJYK4FTcl6ZZsbu1jfQk-3D 109http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPZkyhs6kdDZZLsKKCMu8YCD4erx3Gnlura- 2FrAi-2BFPI7WOE44QOU0S9VgMMYN-2BkOaacDvXiaN1s56X-2Fhwo2ceNyQovFWQNDB6LCrp- 2BDWyipyVDBGv9NF7hCU6SZoGWCmQw-2Fo-2F59i-2FEG2AX-2BKjGMy1GydGgB6P6afiLCVoI8uUbS- 2FwvD-2BDA4tNhA3niANOyBN7riJOj-2BjiTZKo8FrqShW-2FGtZlOFhj-2B6KPPgj6ORC2bRSmPkUUeTnurezHFIn2inLDeI5Rka5nygtAtDio9inN2Zc- 3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF- 2B5v8aoEeo6qAc9jPLNcwH7FTYKqmCEu4LXuIHVrHaCpdJRzHOufo1u3Tt5JCcIj0IWcNQWAuMz87Fv21gbp- 2Bdzon-2BayTzjkd-2BYVaJqBiyrw-2BjhCSy9ht-2F-2BQcDowDiBOIR5kiAuDterzM2XK8Qxi0iujn9zIKcVroRDtgqmXLoZngxyMse- 2B27Fi7Bl0Npcmr-2B7R8sRkfWRQcG8YlYEc-2F-2FIrud0ng5z7KjyyJU9s1-2FLBbx7vg-3D 110http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthe-63suwhr7/ 111http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthg-63suwhr9/

42 Output Model112

Ignacio Alvarez,´ Jorge Ux´oand Eladio Febrero: Internal devaluation in a wage-led econ- omy: the case of Spain113

Cyril Pitrou: Graph representation of balance sheets: from exogenous to endogenous money114

L´ıdia Brochier and Antonio Carlos Macedo e Silva: A supermultiplier Stock-Flow Consistent model: the “return” of the paradoxes of thrift and costs in the long run?115

Mark Setterfield: Long-run variation in capacity utilization in the presence of a fixed normal rate116

Amitava Krishna Dutt and Roberto Veneziani: Education and ‘human capitalists’ in a classical-Marxian model of growth and distribution117

Competition & Change, 23 (2)

Special Issue on Authoritarian Neoliberalism

Matthew DJ Ryan: Interrogating ‘authoritarian neoliberalism’: The problem of peri- odization118

Etienne Schneider and Sune Sandbeck: Monetary integration in the Eurozone and the rise of transnational authoritarian statism119

112http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthj-63suwhr2/ 113http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthm-63suwhr5/ 114http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthq-63suwhr9/ 115http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hths-63suwhr1/ 116http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthv-63suwhr4/ 117http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10b6oc-j4hthx-63suwhr6/ 118http://el.sagepub.com/wf/click?upn=IRYs-2F0hVsQWQj8bBzIcNDi-2BCvI-2FNreq- 2BoR3OH0EnaU86CcL-2FwOj6Ya1LYXYyq8sGhPGdKsJTYSkKsEMnavOvkvJKAgN54147JjY73PHl0uq3G- 2B4IpZN7aWVkVQI3y6i8_2o4dxt9RamsUIbAutb-2FMAIGTIMrNKHMIwRVcFZOoDvkt7O4HycHCbPY31jE6XDpaK4X1nUhSVrvCoyN2eCzTp9AFKgAdvDXYpKy0quT7vKdr- 2Bf-2F8aZLZJuJqAxRjZoPIZh4bmhbxMadnU-2BWIT4AE0-2FF4SwGkXbMVXQdRZGDd- 2BAnxf5cACuW3jIaVhqheU8VNEfaQEdwdf5M8d-2FNP6UK-2BpDyc0sO-2FW9rMdp2- 2FGAu9aMpYMNgI2XogSj5lFpTYtVi-2FeLzrEC-2B8gIw-2FxL9GgoWiO1xu5- 2BVrtP1aXQwp2XSxx7VDupqj0-2B74T1z86AUo2ap6 119http://el.sagepub.com/wf/click?upn=IRYs-2F0hVsQWQj8bBzIcNDi-2BCvI- 2FNreq-2BoR3OH0EnaU86CcL-2FwOj6Ya1LYXYyq8sGxQuO5fW789LHkMLKWR- 2Foa0XyhmlycJ86IaOXD9yJ7GJlWXdJOV2bWEpQiGwQWykt_2o4dxt9RamsUIbAutb- 2FMAIGTIMrNKHMIwRVcFZOoDvkt7O4HycHCbPY31jE6XDpaK4X1nUhSVrvCoyN2eCzTp9AFKgAdvDXYpKy0quT7vKdr- 2Bf-2F8aZLZJuJqAxRjZoPIWtIeVk-2B8OGqN7OwvRssVO364vIhrfjr2B9iYXDL1iN0ZuuZs2EEekbykgqH4bBQIDvwkNc- 2BAJPhP2pVtaiyllr2q5sW-2BfbHomb2aqLJjYKiaO9OXHGupo9R-2FM6-2FeR1g0-2FlR-2B- 2FxY7pFWMegzh0ygRJCmIZN-2FfUiK7eKhhqM3fKiJdejM2RPQt4Fralcdn8Ia1

43 Adam Fabry: Neoliberalism, crisis and authoritarian–ethnicist reaction: The ascen- dancy of the Orb´anregime120

Cameron Smith: ‘Authoritarian neoliberalism’ and the Australian border-industrial complex121

Economy and Society, 48 (1)

Brett Christophers: The allusive market: insurance of flood risk in neoliberal Britain122

Paul Langley, Ben Anderson, James Ash and Rachel Gordon: Indebted life and money culture: payday lending in the United Kingdom123

Liz McFall; Personalizing solidarity? The role of self-tracking in health insurance pric- ing124

Niccol`oTempini and David Teira: Is the genie out of the bottle? Digital platforms and the future of clinical trials125

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44 Troels Krarup: Between competition and centralization: the new infrastructures of European finance126

Claudia J. Daniel and Cecilia T. Lanata Briones: Battles over numbers: the case of the Argentine consumer price index (2007–2015)127

Forum for Social Economics, 48 (1)

A Special Edition on Microcredit

Philip Mader and Sophia Sabrow: All Myth and Ceremony? Examining the Causes and Logic of the Mission Shift in Microfinance from Microenterprise Credit to Financial Inclusion128

Jesse Hembruff and Susanne Soederberg: Debtfarism and the Violence of Financial Inclusion: The Case of the Payday Lending Industry129

Milford Bateman: South Africa’s post-apartheid microcredit experiment: moving from state-enforced to market-enforced exploitation130

Will Butcher and James Galbraith: Microfinance Control Fraud in Latin America131

126https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904060552&key=HQkWYkzgOD74O%2By0EI5uraJa%2BJj%2Bi2T0JjCYa8F% 2BM%2B0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F03085147. 2019.1578064%3Fai%3D12c%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 127https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904060552&key=HQkWYkzgOD74O%2By0EI5uraJa%2BJj%2Bi2T0JjCYa8F% 2BM%2B0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F03085147. 2019.1579438%3Fai%3D12c%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 128https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904020743&key=oyvRXBxLubk%2BiPKKsYyQ7sPtXMWK1HGmTKFswJa9wsE% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F07360932.2015. 1056204%3Fai%3Dakg%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 129https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904020743&key=oyvRXBxLubk%2BiPKKsYyQ7sPtXMWK1HGmTKFswJa9wsE% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F07360932.2015. 1056205%3Fai%3Dakg%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 130https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904020743&key=oyvRXBxLubk%2BiPKKsYyQ7sPtXMWK1HGmTKFswJa9wsE% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F07360932.2015. 1056202%3Fai%3Dakg%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 131https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904020743&key=oyvRXBxLubk%2BiPKKsYyQ7sPtXMWK1HGmTKFswJa9wsE% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F07360932.2015. 1056203%3Fai%3Dakg%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH

45 Historical Materialism, 27 (1)

Jeffery R. Webber: Resurrection of the Dead, Exaltation of the New Struggles132

Gast´onCaligaris and Guido Starosta: Revisiting the Marxist Skilled-Labour Debate 133

David Harvie: (Big) Society and (Market) Discipline: Social Investment and the Fi- nancialisation of Social Reproduction134

Ramon Salim Diab: Capital’s Artificial Intellect Becoming Uber’s Means of Au- tonomous Immaterial Production135

Dave Beech: Art and the Politics of Eliminating Handicraft136

Mark Jay: Cages and Crises: A Marxist Analysis of Mass Incarceration137

Michael Kryluk: ‘Hegel Belongs in the Old Testament of the New Philosophy’138

Ludwig Feuerbach: On the Evaluation of The Essence of Christianity139

Industrial and Corporate Change, 28 (2)

Wolfgang Briglauer and Carlo Cambini: Does regulation of basic broadband networks affect the adoption of new fiber-based broadband services?140

Jan Keil: Is there a causal effect of concentration on persistent profitability differen- tials?141

Gianluca Capone, Franco Malerba and Luigi Orsenigo: Spinoffs in context: entry and performance across different industries142

Special Section: Nathan Rosenberg Memorial Issue

132https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p5_2.xml 133https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p55_3.xml 134https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p92_4.xml 135https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p125_5.xml 136https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p155_6.xml 137https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p182_7.xml 138https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p225_8.xml 139https://brill.com/abstract/journals/hima/27/1/article-p241_9.xml 140http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60psx-63suwhr1/ 141http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60pt0-63suwhr0/ 142http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60pt2-63suwhr2/

46 Ashish Arora, Sharon Belenzon, and Andrea Pataccon: A theory of the US innovation ecosystem: evolution and the social value of diversity143

Valerio Sterzi, Michele Pezzoni, and Francesco Lissoni: Patent management by univer- sities: evidence from Italian academic inventions144

Timothy F Bresnahan: Technological change in ICT in light of ideas first learned about the machine tool industry145

Raffaele Conti, Alfonso Gambardella, and Elena Novelli: Specializing in general purpose technologies as a firm long-term strategy146

James Bessen and Alessandro Nuvolari: Diffusing new technology without dissipating rents: some historical case studies of knowledge sharing147

Kenny Ching, Joshua Gans, and Scott Stern: Control versus execution: endogenous appropriability and entrepreneurial strategy148

David J Teece: Roundtable discussion Nathan Rosenberg Memorial Issue149

International Critical Thought, 9 (1)

Xuangong Wu: Achievements, Problems and Direction of China’s Reform and Open- ing150

James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer: For Whom the Bell Tolls? Capital, Labor and the Global Financial Crisis151

Jack Rasmus: Crisis and Restoration of Neoliberal Policy in the USA: 2008–2018152

143http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60ptb-63suwhr0/ 144http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60ptf-63suwhr4/ 145http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60ptj-63suwhr8/ 146http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60ptl-63suwhr0/ 147http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60ptp-63suwhr4/ 148http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60pts-63suwhr7/ 149http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-10i08i-j60ptw-63suwhr1/ 150https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040756&key=Ke3MNBWa6RMTZONlEOt7TTWvoYwRpGkA8zjHH1fLBes% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F21598282.2019. 1585153%3Fai%3D31e%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 151https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040756&key=Ke3MNBWa6RMTZONlEOt7TTWvoYwRpGkA8zjHH1fLBes% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F21598282.2019. 1584845%3Fai%3D31e%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 152https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040756&key=Ke3MNBWa6RMTZONlEOt7TTWvoYwRpGkA8zjHH1fLBes%

47 Franklin Obeng-Odoom: Economic Cycles, Economic Crises, Resource Grabs, and Expulsions153

Kalim Siddiqui: The Political Economy of Essence of Money and Recent Develop- ment154

Roland Boer: Marx’s Ambivalence: State, Proletarian Dictatorship and Commune155

Spyros Sakellaropoulos: The Althusser-Poulantzas Discussion on the State156

Christian Stache: Review of Red-Green Revolution: The Politics and Technology of Ecosocialism by Victor Wallis157

Eugene Gogol: Raya Dunayevskaya and the Philosophy of Marxist-Humanism: Review of Russia and Marx’s Philosophy of Revolution in Permanence for Our Day by Raya Dunayevskaya158

International Journal of Political Economy, 47 (3-4)

John F. Henry: A Neoliberal Keynes?159

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48 Patrick O’Sullivan: The Capital Asset Pricing Model and the Efficient Markets Hy- pothesis: The Compelling Fairy Tale of Contemporary Financial Economics160

Maria N. Ivanova: Quantitative Easing: A Postmortem161

Oner¨ Tulum and William Lazonick: Financialized Corporations in a National Innova- tion System: The U.S. Pharmaceutical Industry162

Peter Temin: The Political Economy of Mass Incarceration and Crime: An Analytic Model163

Bruno Sovilla: Increasing the Minimum Wage with the State as Employer of Last Resort: A “Predistribution” Proposal for Mexico164

Journal of Economic Geography, 19 (2)

Simona Iammarino, Andr´esRodriguez-Pose and Michael Storper: Regional inequality in Europe: evidence, theory and policy implications165

Jean-Fran¸coisMaystadt and Gilles Duranton: The development push of refugees: evi- dence from Tanzania166

3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F08911916.2018. 1517460%3Fai%3D1gwn0%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 160https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040808&key=4Dhw49r08U9dsEbMAs8%2FQJmIhH8Qyfm6xJt9th0uTzY% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F08911916.2018. 1517462%3Fai%3D1gwn0%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 161https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040808&key=4Dhw49r08U9dsEbMAs8%2FQJmIhH8Qyfm6xJt9th0uTzY% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F08911916.2018. 1517461%3Fai%3D1gwn0%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 162https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040808&key=4Dhw49r08U9dsEbMAs8%2FQJmIhH8Qyfm6xJt9th0uTzY% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F08911916.2018. 1549842%3Fai%3D1gwn0%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 163https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040808&key=4Dhw49r08U9dsEbMAs8%2FQJmIhH8Qyfm6xJt9th0uTzY% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F08911916.2018. 1517464%3Fai%3D1gwn0%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 164https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3-8f3a- 897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040808&key=4Dhw49r08U9dsEbMAs8%2FQJmIhH8Qyfm6xJt9th0uTzY% 3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080%2F08911916.2018. 1517463%3Fai%3D1gwn0%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 165http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy98q-63suwjh7/ 166http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy98u-63suwjh1/

49 Daniel F Heuermann and Johannes F Schmieder: The effect of infrastructure on worker mobility: evidence from high-speed rail expansion in Germany167

Matthew A Cole, Robert J R Elliott, Toshihiro Okubo and Eric Strobl: Natural dis- asters and spatial heterogeneity in damages: the birth, life and death of manufacturing plants168

Max Nathan, Emma Vandore, Georgina Voss: Spatial Imaginaries and Tech Cities: Place-branding East London’s digital economy169

Sevrin Waights: The preservation of historic districts—is it worth it?170

Daniel Montolio and Sim´onPlanells-Struse: Measuring the negative externalities of a private leisure activity: hooligans and pickpockets around the stadium171

Curtis J Simon: Migration and career attainment of power couples: the roles of city size and human capital composition172

Metroeconomica, 70 (2)

Peter Skott: Autonomous demand, Harrodian instability and the supply side173

Brett Fiebiger and Marc Lavoie: Trend and business cycles with external markets: Non-capacity generating semi-autonomous expenditures and effective demand174

167http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy98x-63suwjh4/ 168http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy990-63suwjh3/ 169http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy995-63suwjh8/ 170http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy999-63suwjh2/ 171http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy99b-63suwjh3/ 172http://click.skem1.com/click/bbu3-zo8o1-iyy99e-63suwjh6/ 173http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPa4ArxbGfezBJohuc- 2Bah2cRTiRtbu2SXpZShTqr2HRZuYITbSMPePzUbcXGWHkGHwNplpAKmQ7LwpmIyS37opSqxxBix5Ikcjd3GfeSw8EwvkNB24hsIORWj- 2F-2Fb8FFKF-2B0dtTGy-2FmGci3e8pWQ502Tj4S6ztwpK-2BAJbrj1nSkNw620DNKFekpfwSqEefWZcqklBrYyxulC- 2FnEiifMQvcNlvOlgHpyMd2Rc6XEIOHM1eoiT2SxvfiO4GxKza8puIlF2xIk6I8oUy94et4Vtkv89w- 3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aUj- 2FRNdkfToyFz-2BIESHkSQnYle0ZS96I8tbzGSVgW8iW2MbZpFwxVv0jXv2sZoxgvmGdv5e8KJW8eC-2B- 2FzsLElzsX0RqBgX245g-2F0ymG9b1NicF1y8JYdBfbxFjAm3kaM7nw9P03WJCojULv74MnSknKBPRhXr5EuQuj7- 2FrehEr6tSg1opN4adPc2BVyuJrDe7iulDcf0oAhd-2Bck7E4uUP6vzPOoKipp7YylnTdNIklY-3D 174http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPa4ArxbGfezBJohuc- 2Bah2cRTiRtbu2SXpZShTqr2HRZuYITbSMPePzUbcXGWHkGHwNplpAKmQ7LwpmIyS37opSqxxBix5Ikcjd3GfeSw8EwvkNB24hsIORWj- 2F-2Fb8FFKF-2B0dtTGy-2FmGci3e8pWQ502Tj4S6ztwpK-2BAJbrj1nSkNw6-2FTCIGAjwrSk- 2F4vI5FlWIuq3jblOJ7LeS3u1PVW4p9t0kzfvWPmYpbFj-2Bcfa7s-2BEcDjCUQj- 2FiZQDagjsss6nMkLeP8EUsHsTnSZqohb9MFqA-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD- 2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aUj-2FRNdkfToyFz- 2BIESHkSQnYle0ZS96I8tbzGSVgW8hiFSK9YmZSbsXRWfzr0zim8VPzSiMua20FnrLqTnB-2BsmpFw6c-

50 Franklin Serrano, Fabio Freitas, and Gustavo Bhering: The Trouble with Harrod: The fundamental instability of the warranted rate in the light of the Sraffian Supermulti- plier175

Amitava Krishna Dutt: Some observations on models of growth and distribution with autonomous demand growth176

Reiner Franke: Harrod’s long-range capital outlay as a stabilizer of Harrodian instabil- ity177

Marwil J. D´avila-Fern´andez,Jose L. Oreiro, and Lionello F. Punzo: Inconsistency and over-determination in neo-Kaleckian growth models: A note178

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51 Marc Lavoie: Inconsistencies in the note of D´avila-Fern´andez,Oreiro and Punzo179

Thomas Palley: The economics of the super-multiplier: A comprehensive treatment with labor markets180

Daniele Girardi and Riccardo Pariboni: Normal utilization as the adjusting variable in Neo-Kaleckian growth models: A critique181

New Political Economy, 24 (3)

Susanne L¨utzand Sven Hilgers: When Overlapping Organisations Play Two-Level Games: IMF–EU Interaction in Credit Lending to and Greece182

2FUuZoygRILC3fjIfl-2FdDy2gUcYi6ByzAuCl97efSUD-2FbLY6pQgSKXmgKkFgDFQGKgpz- 2FWV5e0zWyq9al5zRyZMGeXjNRG4YMBXvSPQ78MECCeeQKITCeUGjkQM0U-2FuhRXUHqzoHK-2FqC- 2BRxi795NET9nW6QhdBsbGtKeWNM8k-2BjTvsh4zdNG0njXbJGt4qL0-3D 179http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPa4ArxbGfezBJohuc- 2Bah2cRTiRtbu2SXpZShTqr2HRZuYITbSMPePzUbcXGWHkGHwNplpAKmQ7LwpmIyS37opSqxxBix5Ikcjd3GfeSw8EwvkNB24hsIORWj- 2F-2Fb8FFKF-2B0dtTGy-2FmGci3e8pWQ502Tj4S6ztwpK-2BAJbrj1nSkNw6xoVHpJsTpQBn4B19BUCHE8g85c2i- 2FQYrZChkcCe-2FLFQAWhA2sswCfc6S8zR6Iu8fbbRUHW2KcdqhuRCS6R-2FOpvthSZXzPF54d1jrLLDY5Co- 3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aUj- 2FRNdkfToyFz-2BIESHkSQnYle0ZS96I8tbzGSVgW8g41dPPgRr498rpvq2Gh8qCjmI4lI4uy- 2B4U-2FLgvJhgbDYDITntpvmOaoCz5WFb3HO42TyCCEn-2F0KIhsoG2XyLYLEQWXvFB- 2FjOIDZNNVDDpPvHoLZYEUjtlI4u69Hy-2Bpn-2FUF8P5R7uqJ7z3ffO-2FQiQ7hJtftUp8kfkTNR- 2BFPwDF8y8Xq9lj305HJGHQMTAMFoO0-3D 180http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPa4ArxbGfezBJohuc- 2Bah2cRTiRtbu2SXpZShTqr2HRZuYITbSMPePzUbcXGWHkGHwNplpAKmQ7LwpmIyS37opSqxxBix5Ikcjd3GfeSw8EwvkNB24hsIORWj- 2F-2Fb8FFKF-2B0dtTGy-2FmGci3e8pWQ502Tj4S6ztwpK-2BAJbrj1nSkNw6-2B- 2Fx9N6nAZskrPwspXsTXsNJ4cB3XawOTT4cKCn9-2FeykGP-2BghEkEvRwV9iR2T8o9kSfBw7LEiZ6Ksvx41whm8n3X- 2FO7go3E60R-2BGJjLUZ3e4-3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E- 2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aUj-2FRNdkfToyFz-2BIESHkSQnYle0ZS96I8tbzGSVgW8gEJjmr- 2FCkvurjM8Vw23DAJlPQfunR7-2Fhx-2BG2-2FyQylZlRHxgkMIyZjMnWXyKS- 2B0BBjXIt9JvyyFzMC8kSjM0sJb12I13Az3u-2B-2BrxlRHjOQJ4ey3-2B0gcSe8iCOcnkCj6pntQK5J2vJtuFXaMZ9nx9JpfI7px32PBExIjE- 2BZnjJW-2FGw43cvjvMc1ZZ6-2FefbA29JA-3D 181http://el.wiley.com/wf/click?upn=-2F4d0Y8aR13lVHu481anTzUsxpIxqnXKO7aDEMGBvYypDYLmOREZ49UvzGxcwdvdbwYHbRuWVOUTqOGAjrAH2T- 2BBdi1S9ddLFZ8ZgWt6hw41dDkmLlUFw8J5udTJaV9UtPfBhK72EpbxGfNbuM5QWPa4ArxbGfezBJohuc- 2Bah2cRTiRtbu2SXpZShTqr2HRZuYITbSMPePzUbcXGWHkGHwNplpAKmQ7LwpmIyS37opSqxxBix5Ikcjd3GfeSw8EwvkNB24hsIORWj- 2F-2Fb8FFKF-2B0dtTGy-2FmGci3e8pWQ502Tj4S6ztwpK-2BAJbrj1nSkNw6VKdinlmZUWL- 2BX492rZdbrMcBvUWUFOuxVXau6U3YfdF0I4e7E9EXHjZnugS9VUrikIHV6BdRXoiNvIUWPbhEhzwesRo4aNGmTk15jLIHaak- 3D_ENAiGhLavE-2F2ubkQeDeOUK3RD-2B1jRCSpCkB2-2FOG33E-2Bl8KsylvDej0dQh4pF-2B5v8aUj- 2FRNdkfToyFz-2BIESHkSQnYle0ZS96I8tbzGSVgW8g62QFvkk8CPyg3hCUo-2BSuWahGYTu9- 2FOJclGr653e2i23Kva5Y11HnJizvSMpiOeqKiSYOZarBsn8p7Kihmv9tXY5by2ny8ApH79TeVwtTzLeIhHIjYHMOYTO62HJXy6WxjDTrgldOfXIC1gOsM8StEt6KDWy5dNvb2FJb0TtXi4UxxuB- 2FCOyl4WAXtccRouQY-3D 182https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1443063%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH

52 Kevin L. Young and Alper H. Yagci: Status Quo Conservatism, Placation, or Par- tisan Division? Analysing Citizen Attitudes Towards Financial Reform in the United States183

Harpal Hungin and Scott James: Central Bank Reform and the Politics of Blame Avoidance in the UK184

Lena Rethel: Corporate Islam, Global Capitalism and the Performance of Economic Moralities185

Crystal A. Ennis: The Gendered Complexities of Promoting Female Entrepreneurship in the Gulf186

Ralf Havertz: Right-Wing Populism and Neoliberalism in Germany: The AfD’s Em- brace of Ordoliberalism187

Special Section 2: The political economy of Brexit and British capitalism

Charlie Dannreuther, Scott Lavery and Lucia Quaglia: The Political Economy of Brexit and the Future of British Capitalism Second Symposium188

Ben Rosamond: Brexit and the Politics of UK Growth Models189

183https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1446923%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 184https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1446924%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 185https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1446925%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 186https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1457019%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 187https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1484715%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 188https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1484720%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 189https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1484721%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH

53 Gabriel Siles-Br¨ugge: Bound by Gravity or Living in a ‘Post Geography Trading World’? Expert Knowledge and Affective Spatial Imaginaries in the Construction of the UK’s Post-Brexit Trade Policy190

Real-World Economics Review, 87

Herman Daly: Growthism: Its ecological, economic, and ethical limits191

Katharine N. Farrell: Producing ecological economy192

Edward Fullbrook: Dog barking, overgrazing and ecological collapse193

Neva Goodwin: Addressing meta-externalities: investments in restoring the earth194

Jason Hickel: Degrowth: A theory of radical abundance195

Eric Kemp-Benedict and Sivan Kartha: Environmental financialization: What could go wrong?196

Max Koch: Elements of a political economy of the postgrowth era 197

Peter McManners: Victim of success: civilisation is at risk198

Richard B. Norgaard: Economism and the Econocene: A Coevolutionary Interpreta- tion199

190https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335-49b3- 8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201903210509&key=WZqwdh3hjbQyJB%2BIeOluHPQnnpX% 2BLN0IieFBVyBSbt0%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%2F10.1080% 2F13563467.2018.1484722%3Fai%3D1ha%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 191http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Daly87.pdf 192http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Farrell87.pdf 193http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Fullbrook87.pdf 194http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Goodwin87.pdf 195http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Hickel87.pdf 196http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Kemp-BenedictKartha87.pdf 197http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Koch87.pdf 198http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/McManners87.pdf 199http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Norgaard87.pdf

54 William E. Rees: End game: The economy as eco-catastrophe and what needs to change200

Richard Smith: An ecosocialist path to limiting global temperature rise to 1.5C0 201

Peter S¨oderbaum: Toward sustainable development: Democracy-oriented economics202

Joachim H. Spangenberg and Lia Polotzek: Like blending chalk and cheese203

Clive L. Spash and Tone Smith: Of Ecosystems and Economies: Re-connecting eco- nomics with reality204

Per Espen Stoknes: How to achieve the sustainable development goals by 2050205

Ted Trainer and Samuel Alexander: The simpler way: envisioning a sustainable society in an age of limits206

Review of International Political Economy, 26 (1)

Special Section: New directions in the IPE of Energy

Caroline Kuzemko, Andrew Lawrence and Matthew Watson: New directions in the international political economy of energy207

Peter Newell: Trasformismo or transformation? The global political economy of energy transitions208

200http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Rees87.pdf 201http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Smith87.pdf 202http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Soderbaum87.pdf 203http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/SpangenbergPolotzek87.pdf 204http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/SpashSmith87.pdf 205http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/Stoknes87.pdf 206http://p.feedblitz.com/t3.asp?/973841/39898994/6455707_/www.paecon.net/PAEReview/ issue87/TrainerAlexander87.pdf 207https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1553796%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 208https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull%

55 Benjamin K. Sovacool and G¨otzWalter: Internationalizing the political economy of hydroelectricity: security, development and sustainability in hydropower states209

Caroline Kuzemko: Re-scaling IPE: local government, sustainable energy and change210

Kate J. Neville, Jackie Cook, Jennifer Baka, Karen Bakker and Erika S. Weinthal: Can shareholder advocacy shape energy governance? The case of the US antifracking movement211

Regular articles

Diego Fossati: Embedded diasporas: ethnic prejudice, transnational networks and foreign investment212

Sung-Young Kim: Hybridized industrial ecosystems and the makings of a new devel- opmental infrastructure in East Asia’s green energy sector213

Bentley B. Allan: Paradigm and nexus: neoclassical economics and the growth imper- ative in the World Bank, 1948–2000214

2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1511448%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 209https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1511449%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 210https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1527239%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 211https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1488757%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 212https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1543721%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 213https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1543719%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH 214https://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSecureKeyLogin?uuid=19a9e091-2335- 49b3-8f3a-897c922a1a0c&dateTime=201904040639&key=vHjFjpp7faNwFZ9J0%2BH% 2FBhjYRpccPFX9InRADtJ7Tng%3D&uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Fdoi%2Ffull% 2F10.1080%2F09692290.2018.1543719%3Fai%3D14n%26ui%3D270qy%26af%3DH

56 The Review of Behavioral Economics, 6 (1)

K. Vela Velupillai: Classical Behavioural Finance Theory215

Bettina Rockenbach and Irenaeus Wolff: The Dose Does it: Punishment and Coopera- tion in Dynamic Public-Good Games216

Jesse Aaron Zinn: Information-Theoretic Foundation for the Weighted Updating Model217

Gwen Spencer, Stefano Carattini and Richard B. Howarth: Short-term Interventions for Long-term Change: Spreading Stable Green Norms in Networks218

Books and Book Series

Responses to Marx’s Capital: From Rudolf Hilferding to Isaak Illich

Edited and translated by Richard B. Day and Daniel F. Gaido — 2018, Haymarket Books

Responses to Marx’s Capital: From Rudolf Hilferding to Isaak Illich Rubin is a collection of primary sources dealing with the reception of the economic works of Karl Marx from the First to the Third International. The documents, translated for the first time from German and Russian, range from the original reviews of the three volumes of Capital and the three volumes of Theories of Surplus Value to the debates between the Marxist economists and the bourgeois academic representatives of the theory of marginal utility and the German historical school.

The volume close with six essays by the prominent economist Isaak I. Rubin, including ‘Essays on Marx’s Theory of Money’ and ‘The Dialectical Development of Categories in Marx’s Economic System’.

Please find a link to the book here219 .

215http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/105.00000085 216http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/105.00000084 217http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/105.00000086 218http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/105.00000095 219https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1192-responses-to-marx-s-capital

57 Class After Industry - A Complex Realist Approach by David Byrne — 2019 Palgrave Macmillan

The transition to twenty-first century post-industrial capitalism from the ‘welfare’ in- dustrial capitalism of the twentieth century, has affected the ways in which class is lived in terms of relational inequality and the factors that structure identity. Class After In- dustry takes a complex realist approach to the dynamics of individual lives, places, the social structure and analyses their significance in terms of class. A wide range of quan- titative and qualitative studies are drawn on to explore how ‘life after industry’ shapes class, and the consequent potential for social change. The book will be of interest across the social sciences and beyond, to those concerned with how class forms might translate into political action.

Please find a link to the book here.220

Fascism and Dictatorship The Third International and the Prob- lem of Fascism by Nicos Poulantzas — 2019, Verso

The resurgence of the far right across Europe and the emergence of the “alt-right” in the US have put the question of fascism urgently back on the agenda. For those trying to understand these forms of politics, there is no better place to start than Fascism and Dictatorship, the unrivalled Marxist study of German and Italian fascism. It carefully distinguishes between fascism as a mass movement before the seizure of power and what it becomes as an entrenched machinery of dictatorship. It compares the distinct class components of the counterrevolutionary blocs mobilised by fascism in Germany and Italy; analyses the changing relations between the petty bourgeoisie and big capital in the evolution of fascism; discusses the structures of the fascist state itself, as an emergency regime for the defence of capital; and provides a sustained and documented criticism of official Comintern attitudes and policies towards fascism in the fateful years after the Versailles settlement. Fascism and Dictatorship represents a challenging synthesis of factual evidence and conceptual analysis, a standard bearer of what Marxist political theory should be.

Please find a link to the book here221 .

220https://www.palgrave.com/gb/book/9783030026431 221https://www.versobooks.com/books/2661-fascism-and-dictatorship

58 Governance Beyond the Law: The Immoral, The Illegal, The Criminal edited by A. Polese, A. Russo, and F. Strazzari — 2019, Palgrave Macmillan

This volume explores the continuous line from informal and unrecorded practices all the way up to illegal and criminal practices, performed and reproduced by both individ- uals and organisations. The authors classify them as alternative, subversive forms of governance performed by marginal (and often invisible) peripheral actors. The volume studies how the informal and the extra-legal unfold transnationally and, in particular, how and why they have been/are being progressively criminalized and integrated into the construction of global and local dangerhoods; how the above-mentioned phenomena are embedded into a post-liberal security order; and whether they shape new states of exception and generate moral panic whose ultimate function is regulatory, disciplinary and one of crafting practices of political ordering.

Please find a link to the book here.222

Growth and Distribution by Duncan K. Foley, Thomas R. Michl and Daniele Tavani — 2019, Havard University Press

Authors Duncan Foley, Thomas Michl, and Daniele Tavani present Classical and Key- nesian approaches to growth theory, in parallel with Neoclassical ones, and introduce students to advanced tools of intertemporal economic analysis through carefully devel- oped treatments of land- and resource-limited growth. They cover corporate finance, the impact of government debt and social security systems, theories of endogenous technical change, and the implications of climate change. Without excessive formal complication, the models emphasize rigorous reasoning from basic economic principles and insights, and respond to students’ interest in the history and policy dilemmas of real-world economies.

In addition to carefully worked out examples showing how to use the analytical tech- niques presented, Growth and Distribution presents many problems suitable for inclusion in problem sets and examinations. Detailed answers to these problems are available. This second edition includes fresh data throughout and new chapters on climate change, corporate capitalism, models of wealth inequality, and technical change.

Please find a link to the book here223 .

222https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783030050382 223http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674986428

59 Mass strikes and social movements in Brazil and India - Popular Mobilisation in the Long Depression by J¨org Nowak — 2019, Palgrave

This book explores new forms of popular organisation that emerged from strikes in India and Brazil between 2011 and 2014. Based on four case studies, the author traces the alliances and relations that strikers developed during their mobilisations with other pop- ular actors such as students, indigenous peoples, and people displaced by dam projects. The study locates the mass strikes in Brazil’s construction industry and India’s automo- bile industry in a global conjuncture of protest movements, and develops a new theory of strikes that can take account of the manifold ways in which labour unrest is embedded in local communities and regional networks.

Please find a link to the book here224 .

Minsky’s Moment - An Insider’s View on the Economics of Hy- man Minsky by Piero Ferri — 2019, Edward Elgar Publishing

Based upon his life-long collaboration with Hyman Minsky, Piero Ferri explores and reconsiders Minsky’s moments in the aftermath of the ‘Great Recession’ of 2008. He sets out the analytical and methodological foundations of Minsky’s financial instability hypothesis, offering insightful comments from a unique insider’s perspective.

This book stresses the necessity of including what has been recently discovered about Minsky’s financial instability hypothesis into his lifelong research program, in order to obtain a more complete picture of both his vision and his analytical apparatus. It seeks to move beyond a discussion of Minsky’s original ideas, to verify how they are capable of meeting the challenges derived from the modern evolution of the economy. Developing a meta-model based on regime switching, Piero Ferri examines how the different financial instability hypotheses can be accounted for.

Researchers and advanced students in macroeconomics and finance will greatly benefit from the exploration of how Minsky predicted the ‘Great Recession’, and why his work is of fundamental relevance today. Economic policy makers will also find this book to be a useful tool in discovering methodological innovations to aid further financial recovery from the 2008 economic crisis.

224https://www.palgrave.com/de/book/9783030053741

60 Please find a link to the book here225 .

Money, Method and Contemporary Post-Keynesian Economics

Edited by Sheila Dow, Jesper Jespersen, and Geoff Tily — 2019, Edward Elgar Publish- ing

The Post-Keynesian methodology emphasising uncertainty is indispensable to analysing and understanding the major challenges of the 21st Century. On that basis, this book fo- cuses on the failures of the market economic system to secure stability and sustainability, and demonstrates why this is not recognised by conventional economic theory.

The Post-Keynesian economics set out here aims for an understanding of the economy as a whole and as an integral part of society. Chapters analysing money, banks and finance as dynamic phenomena open the book. They are followed by chapters focusing on methodological issues such as uncertainty, longer-term aspects, sustainability and other non-monetary economic activities.

This important book is a useful tool for students and researchers who wish to gain a better understanding of real world economics. In these areas where conventional macroeconomic theory may not be sufficient, this book offers viable Post-Keynesian alternatives.

Please find a link to the book here226 .

Rosa Luxemburg - The Biography by J.P. Nettl — 2019, Verso

Rosa Luxemburg is one of the most controversial and important figures in the develop- ment of Marxism. In many respects her role is unique; she was at the same time one of the founders of modern communism and one of its severest critics. With the excep- tion of Lenin, she is perhaps the only Marxist of this century who bridges the profound divide of the Bolshevik Revolution; both communists and anti-communists still look to her work and life as a source of inspiration. In this classic biography J.P. Nettl provides an extraordinary portrait of one of the leading twentieth century revolutionaries and political thinkers.

Please find a link to the book here227 .

225https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/minsky-s-moment 226https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/money-method-and-contemporary-post-keynesian-economics 227https://www.versobooks.com/books/2837-rosa-luxemburg

61 Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy: A Twenty- First Century Agenda edited by Leonardo Burlamaqui and Rainer Kattel — 2018, Routledge

2017 marked the seventy-fifth anniversary of Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, a work acknowledged as one of the most insightful books written in the twentieth century. It retains a contemporary quality, and still invites criticisms, new interpretations, and extensions and across disciplines.

This book, in addition to re-examining Schumpeter’s seminal work and undertaking a twenty-first-century update of its main themes, brings together leading social scientists to provide contemporary amendments, extensions – or eventually refutations – of key elements of Schumpeter’s vision and thesis. Issues covered include a new take on creative destruction, the contours of a theory of innovative enterprise, finance and financialisa- tion, a critique of the secular stagnation thesis, Schumpeter’s contributions to a theory of the entrepreneurial state, his conception of socialism and its current relevance for understanding the ’China model’ as well as a rekindling of his democracy thesis for our times.

Bringing together leading international contributors, this book provides fresh perspec- tives on ideas that continue to be hugely relevant to contemporary social sciences and a guide for understanding the current tensions among capitalism, the state and democ- racy. These chapters will be of interest to economists, social scientists and anyone with an interest in modern capitalism.

Please find a link to the book here228 .

Selected Essays of Nigel Harris: From National Liberation to Globalisation by Nigel Harris; edited by Ahmed Shawki — 2019, Haymarket Books

Nigel Harris’s Selected Essays: From National Liberation to Globalisation presents an encompassing overview of the work of one of the most prolific and insightful Marxist economists of the second half of the twentieth century. It starts off with a new interview in which Harris reflects on the development of his thought over the more than half a century separating the death of Stalin from the latest developments in globalisation and capitalist restructuring. The collected essays deal with topics ranging from imperialism and the state to the political economy of development and migration, and offer an ample

228https://www.routledge.com/Schumpeters-Capitalism-Socialism-and-Democracy-A-Twenty- First-Century/Burlamaqui-Kattel/p/book/9781138669697

62 selection from Harris’s political journalism. Together the work constitutes at once a personal journey through the history of the British revolutionary left and a trenchant commentary on some of the most fundamental problems facing a renewed Marxist theory.

Please find a link to the book here229 .

The Economics of Adaptation and Long-term Relationships by Dean Victor Williamson — 2019, Edward Elgar Publishing

Do institutions matter in economic theory? Or is the economic analysis of institutions a distraction from the most important action? Indeed, does Vernon Smith’s notion of the “institution-free core” of formal economic theory encompass that most important action? Would that render an “economics of organization” almost devoid of economic content?

The author takes up an approach that is more agnostic, inter-disciplinary and even a little irreverent. What can theory do and not do? Theory can stimulate questions about how parties manage competing demands for commitment and flexibility in their relationships but what blind spots persist? The book opens with an informal tour of the economics of system design out of which an economics of adaptation ultimately emerged. It then offers explorations, via the application of the economics of adaptation in both law and economics’ relating to how parties manage relationships within the firm, within the context of long-term contracts and, most vividly, within the context of antitrust conspiracy.

Advanced undergraduates, graduate students and teaching faculty in economics, public policy, management and law will find the book relevant, as it maps out connections between literatures that are not often made explicit. For historians of economic thought the book lays out a much richer understanding of what the economics of organization is (and is not), and situates it next to design economics.

Please find a link to the book here230 .

The Future of Mining in South Africa: Sunset or Sunrise edited by Salimah Valiani — 2019, MISTRA

229https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1194-selected-essays-of-nigel-harris 230https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/the-economics-of-adaptation-and-long-term-relationships

63 The future of mining in South Africa is hotly contested. Wide-ranging views from mul- tiple quarters rarely seem to intersect, placing emphasis on different questions without engaging in holistic debate.

This book aims to catalyse change by gathering together fragmented views into unifying conversations. It highlights the importance of debating the future of mining in South Africa and for reaching consensus in other countries across the mineral-dependent globe.

It covers issues such as the potential of platinum to spur industrialisation, land and dispossession on the platinum belt, the roles of the state and capital in mineral develop- ment, mining in the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the experiences of women in and affected by mining since the late 19th century and mine worker organising: history and lessons and how post-mine rehabilitation can be tackled.

It was inspired not only by an appreciation of South Africa’s extensive mineral endow- ments, but also by a realisation that, while the South African mining industry performs relatively well on many technical indicators, its management of broader social issues leaves much to be desired. It needs to be deliberated whether the mining industry can play as critical a role going forward as it did in the evolution of the country’s economy.

Please find a link to the book here231 .

The Reform of Europe - A Political Guide to the Future by Michel Aglietta — 2019, Verso

Since 2010, the eurozone crisis has roiled the continent, creating political discord and generating a long period of economic stagnation. The cyclical recovery enjoyed in 2017 is no cause for complacency. It should act as an impetus to undertake long-overdue reforms.

At present, there is no future for those incapable of investing. There is no stimulus for innovation in countries that have been converted to the hegemony of finance at the expense of productive investment. Europe must confront the challenges of the twenty- first century by recovering the community spirit behind the Union’s origins.

The Reform of Europe demonstrates the need for a long-term vision with two goals: the reconstruction of a social contract based on entrepreneurial partnership and invest- ment in the transition to ecological sustainability. This political vision will restore to citizens of the member states a sense of belonging to a wider community. To this end, argues Michel Aglietta, one of today’s most important heterodox economists, we must

231http://www.africanbookscollective.com/books/the-future-of-mining-in-south-africa- sunset-or-sunrise

64 strengthen European institutions at the financial and fiscal levels. This means making the euro a full currency, endowed with democratic legitimacy.

Please find a link to the book here232 .

Heterodox Graduate Programs, Scholarships and Grants

MSc Economics and MSc Global Economic Governance and Pol- icy at SOAS University of London

The Department of Economics at SOAS University of London has two new exciting graduate programmes for which it invites applications: MSc Economics and MSc Global Economic Governance and Policy.

Both programmes, like all SOAS Economics MSc programmes, are distinctive in their commitment to provide training in both mainstream economics and heterodox alterna- tive theories and methods, quantitative skills, and application to a variety of contempo- rary topics and global economic issues.

This reflects one of our key institutional roles in leading the debates in political economy and pluralistic economics. It also places applied focus on policy engagements and their theory foundations, drawing on our strengths and expertise in those areas.

By completing a SOAS Economics MSc you will be equipped with the specialist knowl- edge required by international employers in both the business and public sectors; as well as providing rigorous foundations for those who wish to go on to do research in economics at the PhD level.

To find out more or to apply, visit out website here233 and here.234

Application deadline: 30 June 2019

Economic Policies in the age of Globalisation (EPOG) - Interna- tional Master’s course

EPOG 2.0 is the new EPOG programme, which started in September 2018. The objec- tive of the new EPOG programme (EPOG 2.0) is to rethink targeted competencies in

232https://www.versobooks.com/books/2880-the-reform-of-europe 233https://www.soas.ac.uk/economics/programmes/msc-economics/ 234https://www.soas.ac.uk/economics/programmes/msc-global-economic-governance-and-policy/

65 macroeconomics, innovation and economic development through the lens of the imper- ative ecological transition to a low-carbon economy. This is the purpose of EPOG 2.0, an innovative master program that articulates systematically how sustainability issues penetrate macroeconomic policy-making, innovation trends, corporate responsibility and development activity.

The core design of the EPOG 2.0 Master’s relies on the development of an expertise in a specific field and a general understanding of interdependencies among economic policies with a precise, consistent and continuous course progression.

Additional students can be enrolled directly in the second year (“1-YEAR-PROGRAMME students”).The successful students will only be awarded a Paris 13 APE degree if they are in Option I or a APE Paris 7 degree if they are in Option II. With the exception of the awarded degrees policy, these students and the 2-YEAR-PROGRAMME students will be treated similarly.

Application process

Please anticipate the fact that the application process is quite long and that it is rec- ommended to start as early as possible. Note also that two recommendation letters are needed to apply and have to be provided by the deadline.

Please also consider thoroughly the options you wish to apply for since the focus of courses and the host institutions according to the option.

Click here235 to access the application platform. To apply for the 1-year programme, please select “Applicant Master 2 (1 year)”.

More information on the call here236 and the application procedure here237 .

Application deadline: 19 May 2019 (23.59 Paris time)

Frederic S. Lee Heterodox Economics Scholarship Fund

The purpose of the Fund shall be to provide scholarships for tuition and fees, up to three classes per semester, for doctoral heterodox economics students. Over the past 4 years, the Fund has given out a total of $37,318 to thirteen PhD students.

In order to be eligible, students must be enrolled in a doctoral heterodox economics program in the United States and demonstrate financial need. The fund will not provide

235http://www.cepn-paris13.fr/epog/?nltr=MTgyOzk3MTtodHRwczovL2FwcGxpY2F0aW9uLmVwb2cuZXUvOzs2OTM5MGJhOThjMGJiYTVhY2U1ZTY0YzliNTcyYWNiMw% 3D%3D 236http://www.cepn-paris13.fr/epog/?nltr=MTgyOzk3MTtodHRwOi8vd3d3LmNlcG4tcGFyaXMxMy5mci9lcG9nLz9wYWdlX2lkPTMzOTQ7OzdlNmE1YjI0ZWMyZDY1ZmJjNjNjNGIzMjM2NjkzZjM3 237http://www.cepn-paris13.fr/epog/?nltr=MTgyOzk3MTtodHRwOi8vd3d3LmNlcG4tcGFyaXMxMy5mci9lcG9nLz9wYWdlX2lkPTMyMzA7O2IyYTk5MzI1YzljN2U4MDllZDUwMzEyNDk2N2ZhNjU5

66 scholarship aid for dissertation credit hours or for credit hours that are not directly relevant for the completion of the doctoral program’s course work.

Selection criteria include:

1. Priority will be given to students who have no scholarship support at all and need the support to continue in their heterodox doctoral program. Students who have only partial scholarship support and need additional support to continue in their heterodox doctoral program will also be considered.

2. Preference will be given to students who are interested in working in heterodox microeconomics. Applicants from other elds of study are also encouraged to apply, especially if they are willing to do heterodox economics in an integrative manner (as opposed to adhering to a single heterodox tradition).

Please find further information here238 and a link to apply here.239

Application deadline: 15 May 2019

MA in Economics in the Economics and Society Stream of the Department of Economics at University of Manitoba

The Economics and Society stream of the Department of Economics is inviting qualified students to enroll in its new MA in Economics Program which commences in September 2019. For the coming year, the MA program will be by thesis.

For the coming-year’s intake, there will be two Research Fellowship Awards available funded by the Manitoba Research Alliance (MRA) specified below:

1. An Indigenous student to undertake research in Indigenous Economic Development in Manitoba or in a closely related topic in any other area of the MRA’s research program in Inner City and Indigenous Poverty. A stipend of $8,750 for one year will be provided by the MRA with the possibility of matching funding from the University of Manitoba’s Faculty of Graduate Studies Graduate Enhancement of Tri-Council Stipends (GETS) Program.

238https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.growyourgiving.org_ scholarships_frederic-2Ds-2Dlee-2Dheterodox-2Deconomics-2Dscholarship-2Dfund& d=DwMFaQ&c=Cu5g146wZdoqVuKpTNsYHeFX_rg6kWhlkLF8Eft-wwo&r=LtbujWNPdbzw6j8eq9- RJVMBctp9ndCoqGEy57VsNLQ&m=J-V_LuUQ2-n5yw-lO95UBlgjMzXTBF2Id9sQ7l45CBg&s= HLizZd8WqKpyrQXLAsmNdGWLnxLyXgMRf3uWVxLxxhU&e= 239https://gkccf.academicworks.com/opportunities/2695

67 2. A Masters student to specialize in analyzing social impact bonds (SIBs), building on research already funded by the MRA.

A stipend of $8,750 for one year will be provided by the MRA.

Applicants to the Economics & Society stream should meet the common admission criteria:

• A minimum degree GPA of 3.1 from a four-year undergraduate program.

• Students proceeding from the University of Manitoba’s Pre-M.A. program must have obtained a minimum GPA of 3.5 in at least 24 credit hours of coursework in economics.

• Normally, successful applicants for admission to the M.A. program will have com- pleted an Honours degree in economics equivalent to that awarded by the Univer- sity of Manitoba. Students will have completed a minimum of 42 total credit hours in Economics courses.

Application Requirements

1. Three (3) letters of reference at least two of which should be from Professors famil- iar with the applicant’s undergraduate performance. One need not be academic.

2. A 500 word statement of the applicant’s background and goals.

3. Scanned copies of original transcripts from all recognized, post-secondary institu- tions attended.

4. English Language proficiency test for non –native speakers, or students who have not completed a university degree from Canada or one of the countries on the English Language Proficiency Test Exemption List.

5. Applicants for this intake must be Canadian or US citizens.

Ideally, applicants should have some familiarity with and interest in Heterodox Eco- nomics. Application documents should be emailed to [email protected] with the subject header Application for Research Fellowship Economics & Society MA Thesis Stream.

Application deadline: 15 May 2019

240mailto:[email protected]?subject=Application%20for%20Research%20Fellowship% 20Economics%20%26%20Society%20MA%20Thesis%20Stream

68 MS Finance at Saint Peter’s University in Jersey City, USA

The Department of Economics and Finance at Saint Peter’s University in Jersey City, New Jersey, USA now offers an MS Finance degree program, with instruction beginning Fall 2019. The 30-credit program can be completed in nine months through a full-time option and twenty-one months through a part-time option, with each student finishing a concentration in Global Finance or Quantitative Finance. In conjunction, the University offers an Accelerated option for its current undergraduate students, the only one of its kind in New York’s Tri-State area.

The program’s innovative curriculum approaches the discipline of finance from a pluralis- tic perspective to examine how it can promote the capital development of nations through sustainable financial relationships. In doing, it goes beyond the traditional topics cov- ered in other MS Finance programs by emphasizing a balance between macroeconomic and microeconomic aspects of finance; focusing on comparative central banking; stress- ing the history of financial economic thought; addressing issues of financial ethics; and giving students the opportunity to partake in mentored research with private, public, and NGO affiliates. This combination gives graduates the in-demand skill sets employ- ers increasingly desire in today’s globalized financial world and best prepares them for leading financial professional certification exams, such as the Chartered Financial Ana- lyst (CFA) and Certified Financial Planner (CFP) designations, since we cover essential knowledge other programs omit.

For more information about the Saint Peter’s University MS Finance degree program click here,241 contact the Office of Graduate Admissions at [email protected] or (201) 761-6470, or reach out to the program’s Founding Director, Dr. Devin Raf- ferty243 .

Please find a link to the application portal here.244

Application deadline: 15 August 2019

Newsletters

241https://www.saintpeters.edu/academics/graduate-programs/business/master-of-science-in- finance/ 242mailto:[email protected] 243mailto:[email protected] 244https://www.saintpeters.edu/graduate-admission/admission-application/

69 economic sociology - the european electronic newsletter

The latest issue of the Economic Sociology Newsletter is now available online here245 .

For Your Information

A letter to Members of the AEA (on a recent survey on the professional climate in the profession)

To the members of the American Economic Association:

The American Economic Association is today releasing results from a survey of current and former members about the professional climate in economics, conducted under the auspices of the AEA’s recently created standing Committee on Equity, Diversity, and Professional Conduct (CEDPC)246 . For the Committee’s summary report of the survey results, see here247 . As the deadline for submitting replies to the survey (February 28) has just passed, the report being released today consists primarily of simple tabulations of the responses. A more extensive report including statistical analyses, analysis of open-ended survey questions, and some comparisons with results of other surveys will be made available in early summer 2019.

Although a full analysis of the survey results remains to be done, it is evident from the findings released today that many members of the profession have suffered harassment and discrimination during their careers, including both overt acts of abuse and more subtle forms of marginalization. This is unacceptable. Excluding or marginalizing people based on their gender, race, or other personal characteristics is not only deeply unfair to those who are excluded, it damages the field as a whole by limiting the diversity of perspectives and dissuading talented people from becoming economists. It is striking that, in an era when women and members of under-represented minority groups have entered so-called STEM fields at increasing rates, the low rates of participation and advancement of women and minorities in economics have changed little in recent decades.

The leadership of the American Economic Association, including our colleagues on the AEA Executive Committee, takes these issues extremely seriously. Based on concerns we heard from our members, the Committee took several steps last year, including

245http://econsoc.mpifg.de/newsletter_current.asp 246https://www.aeaweb.org/about-aea/committees/equity-diversity-professional-conduct 247https://www.aeaweb.org/resources/member-docs/climate-survey-results-mar-18-2019

70 • the preparation of an AEA Code of Professional Conduct248 , adopted by the membership in April 2018. The purpose of the Code is to help create ”a professional environment with equal opportunity and fair treatment for all economists.”

• the authorization of the aforementioned new standing Committee on Equity, Di- versity, and Professional Conduct (CEDPC), chaired by Marianne Bertrand, and the survey on professional climate whose results are being released today. The CEDPC is charged with finding ways to make meaningful improvements in the professional climate in economics.

• the development of EconSpark249 , a website to provide a safe space for discussion of economics job market developments and economic issues.

• the organization of a featured session on the gender problem in economics at the ASSA meetings in Atlanta250 , together with continuing efforts to mentor and support female and minority economists.

Building on those measures, in discussions at the Atlanta meetings and in the intervening weeks, the AEA Executive Committee has agreed to take the following additional steps:

• to approve a formal policy on harassment and discrimination251 , to supplement the Code of Professional Conduct. Acceptance of both the Code and the harass- ment and discrimination policy will henceforth be required for participation in any AEA-sponsored activity or committee.

• to establish and fund an AEA ombudsperson. The ombudsperson will take and permanently record complaints concerning harassment or discrimination in any professional context; advise and provide resources to individuals experiencing ha- rassment or discrimination; with the complainant’s permission, relay complaints to employers and/or to an AEA liaison; and, as appropriate, investigate or otherwise follow through on complaints. The ombudsperson will also help the Association develop policies and programs to fight harassment and discrimination, including offering training at ASSA meetings.

• to approve a formal vetting process to ensure that candidates for election to the Executive Committee, appointed officers such as journal editors, and recipients of AEA honors have not violated the Code or the policy on harassment and discrim- ination.

• to ask the membership to approve changes in the bylaws that would permit the Executive Committee to remove an elected or appointed officer—or, if warranted,

248https://www.aeaweb.org/about-aea/code-of-conduct 249https://www.aeaweb.org/economics-discussion-forum 250https://www.aeaweb.org/webcasts/2019/how-can-economics-solve-gender-problem 251https://www.aeaweb.org/about-aea/aea-policy-harassment-discrimination

71 to revoke the membership of any AEA member—for violations of the Code or the policy on harassment and discrimination.

• to work with the Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Pro- fession252 (CSWEP, led by Judith Chevalier), the Committee on the Status of Minority Groups in the Economics Profession253 (CSMGEP, led by Ebonya Wash- ington and Gary Hoover), and members of the Association to establish and fund a new task force on best practices and training to counter harassment and discrim- ination. The task force will develop a clearinghouse for best practices/training materials, oversee the development of training programs, and seek out partners (such as other professional organizations) with which to collaborate and share in- formation.

It’s important to weed out harassment and discrimination but it’s likewise essential to take action to widen the pipeline of women and minorities entering the field and to help those already in the field to advance professionally. Accordingly, the Executive Committee has also agreed

• to work with CSWEP, CSMGEP, and CEDPC to create a task force on high school and undergraduate education and outreach, to develop and disseminate best practices for attracting members of under-represented groups into economics.

• more broadly, to collaborate with CSWEP, CSMGEP, CEDPC, members of the Association, and other partners to expand existing programs and develop new ones (e.g., summer programs, mentoring, conferences) aimed at increasing the partici- pation and advancement within the field of women, under-represented minorities, and other groups that have suffered discrimination.

The AEA will also continue, as a regular matter, to survey its membership about issues that affect their professional lives, including the professional climate and factors affecting working conditions and professional satisfaction. In this regard, please be on the lookout for a planned survey on career concerns coming soon.

We recognize that these are only first steps in addressing some longstanding problems in the profession. However, we are committed to helping make economics—which has given each of us tremendous professional opportunities and satisfaction—fully accessible and welcoming to anyone with the interest and ability to make a career in the field. We ask for the support of all AEA members in this effort.

Feedback on these initiatives is welcome and encouraged through EconSpark254 . Please click here255 to share your thoughts. To comment, you will need to login or register.

252https://www.aeaweb.org/about-aea/committees/cswep 253https://www.aeaweb.org/about-aea/committees/csmgep 254https://www.aeaweb.org/forum-feedback-aea-initiatives 255https://www.aeaweb.org/forum-feedback-aea-initiatives

72 Signed,

Olivier Blanchard, AEA immediate past-president Ben Bernanke, AEA president Janet Yellen, AEA president-elect

Invitation to subscribe to Solidarity & Sustainability

To subscribe to ”Mother Pelican A Journal of Solidarity and Sustainability” please visit the home page256 . The current issue is Vol. 15, No. 3, March 2019 and is available here.257 The journal is a monthly digest of emerging research and initiatives on global social/ecological justice issues, with especial focus on ecological anthropology, cultural trends, and integral human development. There is also a section on patriarchal gender ideology and religious patriarchy as it pertains to human relations and an integral ecology: ” Meditations on Man and Woman, Humanity and Nature258 ”. Christian ethos, free subscription, one email per month with links to the new pages. Published under a Creative Commons license. Article submissions are welcomed.

Obituaries for Alan B. Krueger

In the wake of Alan B. Krueger’s untimely death at age 58 the New York times and Bloomberg have published obituaries here 259 and here260 .

256http://pelicanweb.org 257http://www.pelicanweb.org/solisustv15n03page1.html 258http://pelicanweb.org/CCC.TOB.html 259https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/18/obituaries/alan-krueger-dead.html 260https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-03-18/princeton-professor-alan- krueger-led-quiet-economics-revolution

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