The Elgar Companion to Women and Heterodox Economics
Edited by Alexandra Bernasek and
Lynne Chester
in Books from Edward Elgar Publishing
Abstract:
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. Focusing 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
Keywords: Heterodox Economics; Women Economists; Feminist Economics; Knowledge Production; Economics Education; Marginalization Of Women Economists (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
ISBN: 9781035329304
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https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781035329311 (application/pdf)
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Chapters in this book:
- Introduction: revealing the unrecognized and under-valued contributions of women heterodox economists

- Lynne Chester
- Working at the intersection of Financial and Feminist Economics

- Alicia Girón
- My journey as a heterodox economist: from the origins of money to degrowth

- Alla Semenova
- Being a heterodox economist as a feminist one

- Marcella Corsi
- Becoming a feminist institutionalist

- Janice Peterson
- Labour, imperialism, and finance: my journey as an economist

- Ramaa Vasudevan
- Tracing money: from personal history to abstract economics

- Ann E. Davis
- Gender and the Sri Lankan debt crisis: why feminist perspectives matter

- Kanchana N. Ruwanpura
- Reflections on epistemic injustice by a Régulationist

- Lynne Chester
- Gender, class, and African development: reflections on my path to heterodox economics

- Lynda Pickbourn
- Navigating the post-socialist transition: institutionalist Post-Keynesianism as a counter to neoliberal disaster

- Anna Klimina
- Bridging theory and praxis: the legacy of Heidi Hartmann

- Deborah M. Figart and Ellen Mutari
- Barbara Bergmann's scholarship on the economic risks of being a housewife

- Sarah F. Small and Jade Ramirez-Barraza
- The rise and rise of feminist macroeconomics: who's recognizing?

- Günseli Berik and Ebru Kongar
- Sadie T.M. Alexander: Black women and a “taste of freedom in the economic world”

- Nina Banks
- We are economists: Black women's contribution to the dismal science

- Sophie G. Pinkston and Rhonda Vonshay Sharpe
- Swimming against the tide: Anne Mayhew and Edythe Miller

- Dell P. Champlin and Janet T. Knoedler
- Feminist Institutionalism

- Maríndia Brites
- J.K. Gibson-Graham: rethinking economic diversity, transformation, and community

- Esra Erdem
- How (un)productive is reproductive labour? Feminist political economists on capitalism's household economy

- Sirisha C. Naidu
- The contributions of women to Post-Keynesian Economics and Post-Keynesian Institutionalism

- Anna Zachorowska-Mazurkiewicz
- Body and planet: re-embedding and re-embodying the economy

- Molly Scott Cato
- An intellectual journey to theorizing motherhood in heterodox economics

- Elaine Agyemang Tontoh
- Being feminist economists today: identities, challenges, and responses

- Giulia Zacchia, Rebeca Gomez Betancourt and Naomi Friedman-Sokuler
- Climate justice, decolonization, and decarbonization

- Alexandra Arntsen
- At the frontier of economic development: researching gender and institutional change in fragile environments

- Holly Ritchie
- From crises to community: reflections on scholarship, pedagogy, and pluralism in heterodox household finance

- Melanie G. Long
- Social reproduction: theory and practice

- Serap Saritas
- Economics for all: time to tackle gendered constraints

- Ariane Agunsoye
- The influence of Kalecki's theory of the firm on my heterodoxy

- Nobantu Mbeki
- Reflections about the state and development strategies in peripheral capitalism

- Emilia Ormaechea
- Understanding discrimination: the role of qualitative and historical methods

- Danielle Guizzo and Bárbara Morais
- Conclusion: the unmasked contributions of women heterodox economists enrich and advance heterodox economics

- Alexandra Bernasek
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