Developing Economics er en blogg som tar en kritisk tilnærming til utviklingsøkonomi, og den redigeres av styremedlem i Rethinking Economics – Norge, Ingrid Harvold Kvangraven. Fra bloggen:
The Developing Economics blog takes critical approach to development economics. It seeks to stimulate debate and critical reflection on economic development among academics and practitioners from all relevant fields.
Her er noen smakebiter:
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Advancing a Research Agenda of Scarcity, Abundance, and Sufficiency (av Adel Daoud, University of Cambridge)
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80 Economic Bestsellers before 1850: A Fresh Look at the History of Economic Thought (av Erik Reinert, Tallinn University of Technology)
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200 Years of Ricardian Trade Theory: How Is This Still A Thing? (av Ingrid Harvold Kvangraven, The New School)
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Kicking Away the (Statistical) Ladder (av Jacob Assa, United Nations)
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The Financialization of Africa’s Development (av Richard Itaman, School of Oriental and African Studies)
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The Market or the State: Why Polanyi Still Matters (av Mohamed Obaidy, The New School)
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Africa: Why Western Economists Get It Wrong (av Grieve Chelwa, Harvard University)
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Can Latin America Learn from Europe’s Mistakes? Divergence in Regional Economic Integration (av Collin Constantine, Kingston University)
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Female Economists and the Blogosphere – Do We Dare Mention Sexism? (av Carolina Alves, School of Oriental and African Studies)
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Beyond the Third Moment in Law and Development: New Insights from Legal Political Economy (av Jamee Moudud, Sarah Lawrence College)
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Using Minsky to Better Understand Economic Development – Part 1 (av Vitor Mello, Levy Economics Institute)