[OPE-L] Issue no. 38 of the Post-Autistic Economics Review [G9]

From: Rakesh Bhandari (bhandari@BERKELEY.EDU)
Date: Tue Jul 04 2006 - 01:11:00 EDT


Issue no. 38 is attached as a Word document
Also available on line at 
<http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue38/contents38.htm>http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue38/contents38.htm


sanity, humanity and science

post-autistic economics review
Issue no. 38,  1 July 2006 
          back issues at 
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In this issue:

            - What Is Neoclassical Economics?

                   Christian Arnsperger    (University of Louvain, Belgium)

                   Yanis Varoufakis    (University 
of Athens, 
Greece).........................................2



          - The Autistic Economist

                Stanley Alcorn and Ben Solarz 
(Yale Univeristy, 
USA)............................13



            - Japan's Alternative Economics

                   Sanford Jacoby   (University of 
California at Los Angles,  USA) 
........................20



          - Game Theory, Freedom and Indeterminacy

                   Kevin Quinn   (Bowling Green 
State University, 
USA).......................................23



          - Reclaiming Policy Space For Equitable

             Economic Development

                   Kari Polanyi Levitt   (McGill 
University, 
Canada)...........................................37



           Opinion

            - What Exactly Is 'Development'?

                   P. Sainath   (India) 
..................................................................................47



            - How Close Are We To ‘Sudden Disorderly Adjustment’?

                   Margaret Legum   (SANE, South 
Africa) 
......................................................50



            -   Submissions, 
etc.……..……….….………………………...................................52




Announcement



The International Confederation of Associations 
for Pluralism in Economics (ICAPE) announces its

second international conference:

Economic Pluralism for the 21st Century

June 1-3, 2007

University of Utah (Salt Lake City, Utah, USA)



In the second half of the 20th century, 
neoclassical economics and its derivatives came 
to dominate

economic thinking, teaching and policymaking. 
Humanity is increasingly feeling the consequences

of this blinkered vision: the ever-widening gap 
between the very rich and all the rest, and 
between

developed and underdeveloped nations; 
globalization without global coordination for the 
common good;

and economically induced climate change, with the 
mid-century prospect of an Earth unable to support

even current levels of human population. 
Meta-externalities from economic systems are 
draining the

resources on which they depend, from families and 
other institutions that educate and socialize 
human

beings, to water, air, soil, and the diversity of species.



In a positive vein, economics in the 21st century 
has already taken a decidedly pluralist turn, 
spurred

in part by the struggles of economists – 
mainstream and heterodox – to increase the 
relevance of

economic theory, policy, and education in a 
changing and challenged world where no single 
theoretical

tradition or institutional structure can 
reasonably claim to hold “the key” to human 
betterment.



ICAPE and the organizers of “Economic Pluralism 
for the 21st Century” invite proposals for papers 
that

discuss or demonstrate the value of economic 
pluralism in any of its domains: economic theory 
and

philosophy, economic institutions and policies, or economic education.



Panels will be organized around thematic topics, 
with an eye to encouraging dialogue among authors

whose papers address similar issues from 
different points of view.  In this fashion, we 
hope to promote

critical engagement and mutual learning among conference participants.



Details are available <http://www.paecon.net/SaltLake.htm>here.


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