Full Description
This book provides unique insight into the influential and impactful working life of Barbara Bergmann. It charts her life and career to contextualize her early work on racial and gender discrimination within the labour market, as well as her analysis of the traditional gendered division of labor within the household. Her significant contributions to economic methodology, her critique of mainstream economics, and her role in the establishment of feminist economics during the 1980s and 1990s are scrutinized, with particular attention to her definition of feminism and conceptualization of commodification. The book also examines her efforts to promote gender equality in public policy, along with her public engagement in advancing a progressive agenda on social security and welfare reform to an audience beyond academia.
This book highlights the lasting impact Barbara Bergmann had at the intersection of economics, race, feminism, and social justice. It will be relevant to students and researchers interested in the history of economic thought and the origin and development of feminist economics.
Contents
Chapter 01: Introduction: A Life in Economics, Feminism, and Public Engagement.- Chapter 02: Feminist, economist, activist.- Chapter 03: Race and sex in the job market.- Chapter 04: Marriage and family.- Chapter 05: Advocating new methods for economics.- Chapter 06: Between feminist economics and institutionalism.- Chapter 07: Changing peoples' life.- Chapter 08: Spreading a progressive agenda outside academia.- Chapter 09: Reminiscences and legacy.- Chapter 10: Bergmann's place in the history of economic thought.



