Review of Social Economy
1997 - 2025
Current editor(s): Wilfred Dolfsma and John Davis From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 80, issue 4, 2022
- Economics and climate justice activism: assessing the financial impact of the fossil fuel divestment movement pp. 423-460

- Tyler Hansen and Robert Pollin
- Collectivity and the capability approach: survey and discussion pp. 461-490

- Ortrud Leßmann
- The big cost of big medicine – calculating the rent in private healthcare pp. 491-513

- Mark Joseph Stelzner and Daniel Taekmin Nam
- The US labor share of income: what shocks matter? pp. 514-549

- Ivan Mendieta-Muñoz, Codrina Rada, Márcio Santetti and Rudiger von Arnim
- A note on the relationship between additive separability and decomposability in measuring income inequality pp. 550-565

- Ben Fine and Pedro Mendes Loureiro
Volume 80, issue 3, 2022
- Economics for (and by) humans pp. 269-282

- Julie A. Nelson
- Women, labour market outcomes and religion: evidence from the British labour market pp. 283-313

- Yousef Daoud and Nabil Khattab
- Determinants of rising profit rates in India’s rural industries pp. 314-335

- Nabanita Mitra and Debarshi Das
- Doing good, feeling good: causal evidence from volunteers pp. 336-358

- Catherine Deri Armstrong, Rose Anne Devlin and Forough Seifi
- Income stagnation and housing affordability in the United States pp. 359-386

- Luke Petach
- Endogenous peer effects and level of informality: some evidence from micro and small firms in Cameroon pp. 387-421

- Ariel Herbert Fambeu and Georges Dieudonné Mbondo
Volume 80, issue 2, 2022
- The confounding problem of the counterfactual in economic explanation* pp. 127-137

- George F. DeMartino
- Effect of religion on the risk behaviour of rural Ghanaian women: evidence from a controlled field experiment pp. 138-171

- Emmanuel Ayifah, Aylit Tina Romm, Umakrishnan Kollamparambil and Stephen A. Vosti
- A simple model of some possible long-run adverse effects of inflation targeting pp. 172-193

- Emiliano Libman
- Rethinking neoliberalism after the Polanyian turn pp. 194-219

- Samuel Knafo
- Quality of governance, social capital and corruption: local governance and the Pakistan marketplace pp. 220-249

- Muhammad Salman Khan
- Choosing pictures at an exhibition: do identity values influence the willingness to pay for art? pp. 250-267

- Claudio Detotto, Marta Meleddu and Marco Vannini
Volume 80, issue 1, 2022
- Introduction to the special issue ‘digital behavioral technologies, vulnerability, and justice’ pp. 1-6

- Lisa Herzog, Philipp Kellmeyer and Verina Wild
- Digital behavioral technology, vulnerability and justice: towards an integrated approach pp. 7-28

- Lisa Herzog, Philipp Kellmeyer and Verina Wild
- Tales of self-empowerment through digital health technologies: a closer look at ‘Femtech’ pp. 29-57

- Tereza Hendl and Bianca Jansky
- Informed consent and algorithmic discrimination – is giving away your data the new vulnerable? pp. 58-84

- Hauke Behrendt and Wulf Loh
- (Online) manipulation: sometimes hidden, always careless pp. 85-105

- Michael Klenk
- How intelligent neurotechnology can be epistemically unjust. An exploration into the ethics of algorithms pp. 106-126

- Sebastian Schleidgen, Orsolya Friedrich and Andreas Wolkenstein
Volume 79, issue 4, 2021
- Re-visiting rules and norms pp. 607-635

- Steve Fleetwood
- Reference group inequality, positional goods, and their impact on subjective well-being: evidence from Turkey pp. 636-663

- M. Burak Önemli and Joel Potter
- Economics in sociology? Original economic theories, concepts and approaches in classical sociologists pp. 664-716

- Milan Zafirovski
- Dimensions of religiosity, altruism and life satisfaction pp. 717-748

- Ilker Kaya, Volkan Yeniaras and Ozgur Kaya
- Inclusive legal justice for inclusive economic development: a consideration pp. 749-783

- Kimty Seng
Volume 79, issue 3, 2021
- Introduction to the special issue on market socialism pp. 413-418

- Hannes Kuch and Gottfried Schweiger
- A socialist justification of the market pp. 419-438

- Man-kong Li
- Public ownership, worker control, and the labour epistocracy problem pp. 439-453

- Nicholas Vrousalis
- Who cares? Market socialism and social reproduction pp. 454-475

- Mirjam Müller
- Justice, ethical dispositions, and liberal socialism pp. 476-505

- Hannes Kuch
- John Stuart Mill: market socialist? pp. 506-527

- Helen McCabe
- Market socialism, labour market domination, and the state as employer of last resort pp. 528-553

- Alan Thomas
- Property-owning democracy, market socialism and workplace democracy pp. 554-580

- Christian Neuhäuser
- Market socialism as a form of life pp. 581-606

- Tully Rector
Volume 79, issue 2, 2021
- A definition of habit for socio-economics pp. 131-165

- Steve Fleetwood
- Social capital – a topsoil for democracy pp. 166-190

- Kanybek Nur-tegin
- Market competition and ethical standards: the case of fair trade mainstreaming pp. 191-221

- Eefje de Gelder, Albert de Vaal, Paul H. Driessen, Esther-Mirjam Sent and Josée Bloemer
- Wage dynamics in light of the structural changes in the labour market across four more economically developed countries of Europe pp. 222-260

- Rosalia Castellano, Gaetano Musella and Gennaro Punzo
- Do trustful labor–management relations enhance innovation? Evidence from German WSI data pp. 261-285

- Sergei Hoxha and Alfred Kleinknecht
- Universalism vs. particularism: a round trip from sociology to economics pp. 286-309

- Guido de Blasio, Diego Scalise and Paolo Sestito
- Non-market institutions and crime in US counties: Hayek v. Polanyi pp. 310-332

- Roland Zullo
- Phenomenology and heterodox economics pp. 333-356

- Geoffrey Poitras
- Linkage between social sector’s spending and HDI: study on individual as well as panel data of Indian states pp. 357-379

- Ramesh Chandra Das, Chhanda Mandal and Arun Kumar Patra
- What is structural about unemployment in OECD countries? pp. 380-412

- Philipp Heimberger
Volume 79, issue 1, 2021
- Introduction to the special issue of ROSE pp. 1-2

- Vivek Chibber
- Induced technology hypothesis. Acemoglu and Marx on deskilling (skill replacing) innovations pp. 3-24

- Korkut Alp Ertürk
- The dialectics of differentiation: Marx's mathematical manuscripts and their relation to his economics pp. 25-50

- Peter Matthews
- The historical evolution of the cost of social reproduction in the United States, 1959–2012 pp. 51-75

- Katherine A. Moos
- The network of empire and universal capitalism: imperialism and the laws of capitalist competition pp. 76-102

- Ramaa Vasudevan
- How exploiters dominate pp. 103-130

- Nicholas Vrousalis
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