JULIE MATTHAEI Professor Department Of

JULIE MATTHAEI Professor Department Of

JULIE MATTHAEI Professor Department of Economics, Wellesley College Wellesley, Massachusetts 02481 [email protected] (781) 283-2181 http://www.wellesley.edu/economics/faculty/matthaeij Cornerstone Village Cohousing 195 Harvey Street #10 Cambridge, MA 02481 EDUCATION AND DEGREES: Ph.D. and M.A. in Economics (Yale University 1978) B.A. in Economics (University of Michigan 1974) Diplome d'Etudes Economiques Generales (University of Paris 1973) FELLOWSHIPS, HONORS, AWARDS: Fellow, Radcliffe Public Policy Center, 1999-2000 "Outstanding Book in Human Rights" Award from the Gustavus Myers Center for Race, Gender, & Work 1992 Choice Magazine's "Outstanding Academic Books" Award for An Economic History of Women in America 1983 Mellon Faculty Development Award, with Teresa Amott, for course development, "The Sexual Division of Labor: Issues in Public Policy," 1980 Danforth Graduate Fellowship, Yale University 1977-78 Honors, University of Michigan 1974 Honors, University of Paris 1972 Dean's List, Stanford 1970 Phi Beta Kappa Certificate of Commendation 1969 2 National Merit Scholar 1969 ACADEMIC POSITIONS HELD: Professor of Economics, Wellesley College, 1991 to present; Associate Professor of Economics with tenure, Wellesley College, 1984 to 1991; Chair, Department of Economics, 1985-87; Assistant Professor of Economics, Fall 1978 to 1984 Professor, Traveling Feminist Economics Graduate Course, Humphrey Institute, University of Minnesota, Spring Semester 1998. Acting Instructor, Yale University, "Women in the Economy," Spring 1978 Research Assistant, Center for Research on Economic Development, University of Michigan 1974 COURSES TAUGHT: Feminist Economics; Introductory Microeconomics; Political Economy of Gender, Race, and Class; Radical Political Economics; Marxist and Post-Marxist Economics; The History of Economic Thought; Intermediate Microeconomic Theory; Gender, Race, and Economics; Race and Gender in U.S. Economic History; An Introduction to Economic Thinking and Economic Herstories (writing-intensive courses); BOOKS: Solidarity Economy: Building Alternatives for People and Planet. Papers & Reports from the U.S. Social Forum 2007. with Jenna Allard and Carl Davidson, co-editors. Chicago: ChangeMaker Publishing, 2008 Race, Gender and Work: A Multi-Cultural Economic History of Women in the United States, with Teresa Amott. Boston: South End Press, 1991 and revised edition, 1996. Parts pre- published in Ms. Magazine (Dec. 1990) and Z Magazine. Partially reprinted in Scholarship by and about Las Mujeres (Chicanas, Latinas, Puertorriquenas, Cubanas) in the United States, Center for Advanced Feminist Studies, University of Minnesota; in Margaret Andersen and Patricia Hill Collins, Race, Class and Gender: An Anthology, 5th edition, Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2000; in Dana Dunn, ed., Workplace/Women’s Place, Los Angeles: Roxbury Publishing Company, 1997 and Oxford, 2006; and as "Race, Gender and Work: The History of Asian and Asian-American Women," in Charles A. Gallegher, Rethinking the Color Line: Readings in Race and Ethnicity. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company, 1999, pp. 222-236. An Economic History of Women in America: Women's Work, the Sexual Division of Labor, and the Development of Capitalism, New York, Schocken Books, 1982 and Brighton, England: The 3 Harvester Press. ARTICLES ‘From Inequality to Solidarity: Co-Creating a New Economics for the 21st Century.” Union for Radical Political Economics Reader. Forthcoming. “Women, Feminism, and the Solidarity Economy,” in Emily Kawano, Thomas Neal Masterson, and Jonathan Teller-Elsberg. Solidarity Economy I. Amherst: Center for Popular Economics, 2010. Reprinted in Italian on Ingenere, http://www.ingenere.it/articoli/da-tina-tata-leconomia- solidale-delle-donne, and also in Mother Pelican: A Journal of Solidarity & Sustainability, http://www.pelicanweb.org/solisustv08n08page8.html Más allá del hombre económico: crisis económica, economía feminista, y la economía solidaria (Beyond economic man: economic crisis, feminist economics, and the solidarity economy). Cayapa. Revista Venezolana de Economía Social. Año 10 - Nº 19. enero - junio 2010. http://www.saber.ula.ve/bitstream/123456789/32073/1/articulo5.pdf “Another Economy is Possible! Using the U.S. Social Forum to Create the U.S. Solidarity Economy Network,” with Jenna Allard. In Marina Karides, Walda Katz-Fishman, Rose M. Brewer, Jerome Scott and Alice Lovelace, eds., The U.S. Social Forum: Perspectives of a Movement, 247-258. Chicago: ChangeMaker Publishing, 2010. “From Crisis to Job Creation,” with Jenna Allard, Dollars & Sense, January/February 2009,and in Immanuel Ness, Amy Offner, and Chris Sturr, eds.,.Real World Labor, Boston: Dollars & Sense, 2009. “Introduction,” with Jenna Allard. In Jenna Allard, Carl Davidson, and Julie Matthaei, eds. Solidarity Economy: Building Alternatives for People and Planet. Papers & Reports from the U.S. Social Forum 2007. Chicago: ChangeMaker Publishing, 2008 “Feminist Economic Transformation,” with Barbara Brandt, in Jenna Allard, Carl Davidson, and Julie Matthaei, eds. Solidarity Economy: Building Alternatives for People and Planet. Papers & Reports from the U.S. Social Forum 2007. Chicago: ChangeMaker Publishing, 2008 “Spirituality and Economic Transformation,” in Jenna Allard, Carl Davidson, and Julie Matthaei, eds. Solidarity Economy: Building Alternatives for People and Planet. Papers & Reports from the U.S. Social Forum 2007. Chicago: ChangeMaker Publishing, 2008 “Live Your Power: Socially Responsible Consumption, Work, and Investment,” in Jenna Allard, Carl Davidson, and Julie Matthaei, eds. Solidarity Economy: Building Alternatives for People and Planet. Papers & Reports from the U.S. Social Forum 2007. Chicago: ChangeMaker Publishing, 2008 4 “The Transformative Moment,” with Barbara Brandt, in Robert Albritton, Robert Jessop, and Richard Westra, eds. Political Economy and Global Capitalism: The 21st Century Present and Future. London: Anthem Press, 2007. “Healing Ourselves, Healing Our Economy: Paid Work, Unpaid Work, and the Next Stage of Feminist Economic Transformation,” Review of Radical Political Economics 33 (2001) 461- 494; reprinted in Lynn Dallas, ed., Just Economics: A Socio-Economic Approach to Law and Public Policy, Durham, NC: Carolina Academic, 2003. "Beyond Racist Capitalist Patriarchy: Growing a Liberated Economy," in Ron Baiman, Heather Boushey, and Dawn Saunders, eds, Political Economy and Contemporary Capitalism: Radical Perspectives on Economic Theory and Policy. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2000. "Some Comments on the Role of Lesbianism in Feminist Economic Transformation," Feminist Economics, 4:2 (1998), 83-88. "Why Marxist, Feminist, and Anti-Racist Economists Should be Marxist-Feminist-Anti-Racist Economists." Feminist Economics 2:1 (1996), 22-42. "The Sexual Division of Labor, Sexuality, and Lesbian/Gay Liberation: Towards a Marxist Feminist Analysis of Sexuality in U.S. Capitalism." Review of Radical Political Economics 27:2 (June 1995). Reprinted in Amy Gluckman and Betsy Reed, eds., Homo Economics: Capitalism, Community, & Lesbian and Gay life. London: Routledge, 1997; in Elizabeth Hartung and Peter Kivisto, eds., Intersecting Inequalities: Class, Race, Sex and Sexualities, East Rutherford. NJ: Pearson, 2007; and in Joyce Jacobsen and Adam Zeller, eds. Queer Economics: A Reader, Routledge, 2007. "Marxist-Feminist Contributions to Radical Economics" in Susan Feiner and Bruce Roberts, eds., Radical Economics. Norwell, Mass.: Kluwer-Nijhoff, 1992. pp. 117-144. "Race, Gender, Work: the History of Asian and Asian-American Women," with Teresa Amott, Race & Class: A Journal for Black and Third World Liberation 31:3 (January-March 1990): 61- 80. "Surplus Labor, the Household, and Gender Oppression," Rethinking Marxism 2 (Winter 1989): 70-78. Reprinted in Harriet Fraad, Stephen Resnick, and Richard Wolff, Bringing it All Back Home: Class, Gender and Power in the Modern Household. Boulder, Colo.: Pluto Press, 1994, 42-49. "Political Economy and Family Policy," in The Imperiled Economy, Book II, Through the Safety Net, ed. by Robert Cherry et al. Union for Radical Political Economics and Monthly Review Press, 1988. Reprinted in Marcia Stubbs & Sylvan Barnet, The Little, Brown Reader, Fifth Edition. Boston: Scott, Foresman, and Co., 1989. "The Promise of Comparable Worth: A Socialist-Feminist Perspective." with Teresa Amott. Socialist Review 88:2 (April-June 1988). Reprinted in a revised version in Nancy Schniedewind 5 et al, eds., Women: Images and Realities, A Multicultural Anthology of Women in the United States. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Co., 1994. "La Critica a la Familia en los Estudios de la Mujer." Revista Cayey. XIX:54-55 (Marzo-Junio de 1987). "Rethinking Scarcity: Neo-Classicism, Neo-Malthusianism, and Neo-Marxism," Review of Radical Political Economics 15(4):81-94 (Winter 1985), and Reply to Comment on this article by John M. Gowdy, "Neoclassical and Neo-Marxian Views of Scarcity: There is a Free Lunch," Review of Radical Political Economics 18(4):106-8 (Winter 1986). "Comparable Worth, Incomparable Pay: The Political Economy of Comparable Worth," with Teresa Amott, Radical America 18(5):21-8 (September/October 1984), reprinted in revised form in Rochelle Lefkowitz and Ann Withorn, eds., For Crying Out Loud. New York: Pilgrim Press, 1986 and in Sylvan Barnet and Hugo Bedau, eds., Current Issues and Enduring Questions: Methods and Models of Argument from Plato to the Present. New York: St. Martin's, 1987, pp. 106-112. "Capitalism

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