The Elgar Companion to Women and Heterodox Economics : Past, Present, and Future

  • 予約

The Elgar Companion to Women and Heterodox Economics : Past, Present, and Future

  • ただいまウェブストアではご注文を受け付けておりません。 ⇒古書を探す
  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 536 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781035329304

Full Description

This pioneering book aims to rectify and reduce the historic marginalization of women's economic scholarship, underlining their contributions to the field of heterodox economics.

Written by women, the book centers women's voices, allowing them to represent themselves and their work. With most of the contributors originating beyond the Anglophone sphere, the book has a global outlook, pushing against the USA-centric scholarship on women in heterodox economics of recent decades. Focussing on why women are heterodox economists, and on their contributions to traditions in the field, chapters include first-hand accounts by both established and emerging heterodox economists covering their careers, influences, and thoughts on the future of the field. It also showcases the contributions of key women scholars to the development of dominant approaches including original institutional economics, feminist economics, Marxist economics, post-Keynesian economics and development economics.

A vital reference for heterodox economists around the globe, this Elgar Companion is also an enlightening read for scholars in political economy, sociology, history, political science, philosophy and gender studies.

Contents

Contents
Foreword by Nina Eichacker xiii
Preface xv
Introduction: revealing the unrecognized and under-valued contributions of women
heterodox economists 1
Lynne Chester
PART I WHY WOMEN ARE HETERODOX ECONOMISTS
Introduction to Part I: Why women are heterodox economists
Alexandra Bernasek
1 Working at the intersection of Financial and Feminist Economics 22
Alicia Girón
2 My journey as a hetererodox economist: from the origins of money to
degrowth 38
Alla Semenova
3 Being a heterodox economist as a feminist one 52
Marcella Corsi
4 Becoming a feminist institutionalist 65
Janice Peterson
5 Labour, imperialism, and finance: my jouney as an economist 80
Ramaa Vasudevan
6 Tracing money: from personal history to abstract economics 92
Ann E. Davis
7 Gender and the Sri Lankan debt crisis: why feminist perspectives matter 106
Kanchana N. Ruwanpura
8 Reflections on epistemic injustice by a Régulationist 120
Lynne Chester
9 Gender, class, and African development: reflections on my path to
heterodox economics 137
Lynda Pickbourn
10 Navigating the post-socialist transition: institutionalist Post-Keynesianism
as a counter to neoliberal disaster 151
Anna Klimina
PART II THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF WOMEN TO HETERODOX ECONOMICS
Introduction to Part II: The contributions of women to heterodox economics
Alexandra Bernasek
11 Bridging theory and praxis: the legacy of Heidi Hartmann 169
Deborah M. Figart and Ellen Mutari
12 Barbara Bergmann's scholarship on the economic risks of being a
housewife 184
Sarah F. Small and Jade Ramirez-Barraza
13 The rise and rise of feminist macroeconomics: who's recognizing? 199
Günseli Berik and Ebru Kongar
14 Sadie T.M. Alexander: Black women and a "taste of freedom in the
economic world" 215
Nina Banks
15 We are economists: Black women's contribution to the dismal science 228
Sophie G. Pinkston and Rhonda Vonshay Sharpe
16 Swimming against the tide: Anne Mayhew and Edythe Miller 247
Dell P. Champlin and Janet T. Knoedler
17 Feminist Institutionalism 261
Maríndia Brites
18 J.K. Gibson-Graham: rethinking economic diversity, transformation, and
community 276
Esra Erdem
19 How (un)productive is reproductive labour? Feminist political economists
on capitalism's household economy 292
Sirisha C. Naidu
20 The contributions of women to Post-Keynesian Economics and Post-
Keynesian Institutionalism 305
Anna Zachorowska-Mazurkiewicz
21 Body and planet: re-embedding and re-embodying the economy 318
Molly Scott Cato
PART III WOMEN ADVANCING HETERODOX ECONOMICS
Introduction to Part III: Women advancing heterodox economics
Alexandra Bernasek
22 An intellectual journey to theorizing motherhood in heterodox economics 334
Elaine Agyemang Tontoh
23 Being feminist economists today: identities, challenges, and responses 349
Giulia Zacchia, Rebeca Gomez Betancourt and Naomi Friedman-Sokuler
24 Climate justice, decolonization, and decarbonization 363
Alexandra Arntsen
25 At the frontier of economic development: researching gender and
institutional change in fragile environments 378
Holly Ritchie
26 From crises to community: reflections on scholarship, pedagogy, and
puralism in heterodox household finance 394
Melanie G. Long
27 Social reproduction: theory and practice 409
Serap Saritas
28 Economics for all: time to tackle gendered constraints 422
Ariane Agunsoye
29 The influence of Kalecki's theory of the firm on my heterodoxy 437
Nobantu Mbeki
30 Reflections about the state and development strategies in peripheral
capitalism 451
Emilia Ormaechea
31 Understanding discrimination: the role of qualitative and historical
methods 466
Danielle Guizzo and Bárbara Morais
Conclusion: the unmasked contributions of women heterodox economists enrich
and advance heterodox economics 480
Alexandra Bernasek

最近チェックした商品