Pluralist Economics
This book is an authoritative and accessible guide to the pluralist movement threatening to revolutionise mainstream economics. Leading figures in the field explain why pluralism is a required virtue in economics, how it came to be blocked and what it means for the way we think about, research and teach economics.

The first part of the book looks at how neoclassical economics gained its stranglehold, particularly in the United States, and how the social and intellectual underpinnings of economics have enabled it to maintain this in the face of inconsistent evidence from the real world. This is then contrasted with different approaches to pluralism. Pluralist Economics then goes on to address the array of arguments for establishing pluralism, showing how economics came to function as a concealed ideology and not as a science, and how value-free economics is an illusion. Finally, it addresses the practical problems presented by this different way of doing economics.

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Pluralist Economics
This book is an authoritative and accessible guide to the pluralist movement threatening to revolutionise mainstream economics. Leading figures in the field explain why pluralism is a required virtue in economics, how it came to be blocked and what it means for the way we think about, research and teach economics.

The first part of the book looks at how neoclassical economics gained its stranglehold, particularly in the United States, and how the social and intellectual underpinnings of economics have enabled it to maintain this in the face of inconsistent evidence from the real world. This is then contrasted with different approaches to pluralism. Pluralist Economics then goes on to address the array of arguments for establishing pluralism, showing how economics came to function as a concealed ideology and not as a science, and how value-free economics is an illusion. Finally, it addresses the practical problems presented by this different way of doing economics.

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Overview

This book is an authoritative and accessible guide to the pluralist movement threatening to revolutionise mainstream economics. Leading figures in the field explain why pluralism is a required virtue in economics, how it came to be blocked and what it means for the way we think about, research and teach economics.

The first part of the book looks at how neoclassical economics gained its stranglehold, particularly in the United States, and how the social and intellectual underpinnings of economics have enabled it to maintain this in the face of inconsistent evidence from the real world. This is then contrasted with different approaches to pluralism. Pluralist Economics then goes on to address the array of arguments for establishing pluralism, showing how economics came to function as a concealed ideology and not as a science, and how value-free economics is an illusion. Finally, it addresses the practical problems presented by this different way of doing economics.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781848130449
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/01/2008
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Edward Fullbrook is the founder and editor of The Real World Economics Review (formerly the Post-Autistic Economics Review) and webmaster of www.paecon.net. He is a research fellow in the School of Economics at the University of the West of England. He is the author of Sex and Philosophy: Rethinking de Beauvoir and Sartre (2008).
Edward Fullbrook is the founder and editor of The Real World Economics Review (formerly the Post-Autistic Economics Review) and webmaster of www.paecon.net. He is a research fellow in the School of Economics at the University of the West of England. He is the author of Sex and Philosophy: Rethinking de Beauvoir and Sartre (2008).

Table of Contents

Notes on Contributors
Introduction - Edward Fullbrook

Part I - What is Pluralism?
1. Neoclassical Economics: Three Identifying Features - Christian Arnsperger and Yanis Varoufakis
2. Pluralism, Formalism and American Economics - Harry Landreth and David Colander
3. The Construction of Economics - Kyle Siler
4. Paradigms and Pluralism - Robert F. Garnett, Jr.

Part II - Arguments for Pluralism
5. Narrative Pluralism - Edward Fullbrook
6. Three Arguments for Pluralism - J. E. King
7. Economics as Ideology - Peter Söderbaum
8. Metaphor and Pluralism - Geoffrey Hodgson
9. Explanatory Pluralism - Jeroen van Bouwel

Part III - Pluralist Practice in Economics
10. Beyond Talking the Talk - Andrew Kliman and Alan Freeman
11. In the Economics Classroom - Peter Earl
12. Some Practical Aspects - Thomas Mayer
13. Islamic Economics: A Case Study - Mohamed Aslam Haneef

Notes
References
Index

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