1/50 Once again, our president Florence Jany-Catrice reminds the lack of pluralism in the teaching of economics.
A thread on students’ struggles for pluralism in the teaching of economics at the university ⤵ franceculture.fr/emissions/le-p…
2/50 To get started, we recommend you to read this paper, in which, among other things, A. Orléan @OrleanAndre distinguishes different ways of being pluralist in the teaching of political economy : variances.eu/?p=3626
3/50. In this paper, A. Orléan begins by recalling that, over the last 20 years, in France, the teaching of economics in higher education raised strong controversy.
4/50 Pluralism had progressively disappeared from graduates and undergraduates programs all over the world in the past years.
5/50 For example in the US in 1988, the American Economic Association formed a ‘Commitee On Graduate Education in Economics’ which presented a report that was highly critical of the uniformity found in graduate economics programs. The report (JEL 1991): citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/downlo…
6/50. Students began to fight for pluralism in France 22 years ago.
8/50 In their open letter (Le Monde 06/17/2000), these students asked for, among other things, « a pluralism of approaches in economics ». The text (english version) is available here : autisme-economie.org/article142.html
9/50 Jack Lang, the French Minister of National Education, then instructed Jean-Paul Fitoussi to report on undergraduate and graduates economics programs within a year.
11/50 This movement soon internationalised. Among others, 27 embattled economics PhD students at Cambridge University, published a petition titled “Opening Up Economics” (june 2001).
12/50 In June 2001, “75 students, researchers and professors from 22 nations gathered for a week of discussion on the state of economics and the economy at the University of Missouri - Kansas City (UMKC)”: paecon.net/PAEtexts/Kansa…
13/50 Thanks to Edward Fullbrook, autisme-économie gave birth to Post-Autistic Economic Networks.
14/50 "A Brief History of the Post-Autistic Economics Movement” can be found here: paecon.net/HistoryPAE.htm
15/50 The first issues of the Post-Autistic Economic Review (today Real World Economic Review) are newsletters: paecon.net/PAEReview/whol…
17/50 The WEA “ fills a gap in the internat. community of economists — the absence of a truly internat., inclusive, pluralist, professional associations. ...
18/50 ... The AEA and UK’s Royal Eco Soc provide broad associations mainly for their country’s economists. The WEA will do the same for the world’s community of economists, while promoting a pluralism of approaches to economic analysis.” @RealWorldEcon
20/50 E. Fullbrook tells the story of this movement in the intro of ‘The Crisis in Economics: The post-autistic economics movement: the first 600 days’. This book, which also contains interesting contributions about the teaching of economics, is here: researchgate.net/publication/37…
21/50 Gilles Raveaud @RaveaudGilles also tells this story, with comments on Vernières’ and Fitoussi’s report in a paper published in 2015: cairn.info/revue-educatio…
22/50 For Gilles Raveaud @RaveaudGilles, this students’ movement was an « intellectual victory » but a « political defeat ». And for good reasons as nothing changed.
23/50 Hence a 2nd students’ movement sprung up in France in 2011, which called for pluralism in economics programs. The group calls itself Peps-économie @Pepseconomie “For a Pluralistic Teaching in Economics in Higher Education”.
Their website is here: pepseco.wordpress.com
24/50 For these students “Three forms of pluralism must be at the core of curricula: theoretical, methodological and interdisciplinary.” @Pepseconomie
25/50 According to them, these three forms of pluralism “will not only help to enrich teaching and research and reinvigorate the discipline”. They also carry “the promise of bringing economics back into the service of society”.
26/50 Students of @Pepseconomie soon conduct a study on undergraduate economics programs in French universities, which results confirm the lack of three forms of pluralism: theoretical, methodological and interdisciplinary.
27/50 This study leads them to propose an undergraduate curriculum. The study’s results and some of their propositions are available here: pepseco.files.wordpress.com/2015/05/peps-t…
28/50 And they were presented by the students of @Pepseconomie the 6th april 2013 at the « Etats Généraux de l’enseignement de l’économie dans le supérieur » (EHESS): pepseco.wordpress.com/etats-generaux…
29/50 The story has repeated itself, since the French Minister of Higher Education and Research, G. Fioraso, mandated P.-C. Hautcoeur to analyse the situation of economics curriculum in the light of, among other things, the principle of theoretical diversity.
32/50 Around the same time @IdiesInstitut published an excellent report (thanks to Philippe Frémeaux, Gérard Grosse and @AuroreLalucq) titled « sortir de la crise de l’enseignement supérieur d’économie »: idies.org/public/Publica…
34/50 As a matter of fact, this French movement was part of a second wave of students’ protests, for initiatives like Pepseconomie popped up aroung the world.
36/50 In 2014, 82 student groups from 31 different countries organized themselves into the network ISIPE (International Student Initiative for Pluralism in Economics): isipe.net
38/50 Students of the network Rethinking Economics @rethinkecon were part of ISIPE. According to them "Economics in universities is (…) dogmatically taught from one perspective as if it is the only legitimate way to study the economy.”
39/50 Students organizations worked hard (and still are) at helping to reform economics education at the university. They conducted studies, did research, wrote reports and books, built websites, etc.
40/50 J. Christopher Proctor’s report, titled “Mapping Pluralist Research” (March 2019), “provides an overview of the research which has come out of the student movement for pluralism in economics.” @Jcproctor29 It is available here: oikos-international.org/news/mapping-p…
42/50 In 2019, Rethinking Economics Belgium conducted an excellent survey of 566 students majoring in economics and management in the six universities of Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles : econospheres.be/10-ANS-APRES-L…
43/50 Students’ initiatives exist all over the world to compensate for the lack of pluralism in their curricula.
44/50 Some students created Exploring Economics @exploringecon an open-source e-learning platform, built to give people “the opportunity to discover & study a variety of economic theories, topics, and methods.”: exploring-economics.org/fr/
45/50 “Launched in December 2016, this open-access and bottom-up e-learning platform is today driven by an international team of partners, editors, students, and lecturers, with numerous opportunities to participate.” @exploringecon@PluralEcon@rethinkecon@Pepseconomie
48/50 Reteaching Economics @ReteachEcon (a network of UK-based early career academics supporting student demands for pluralist teaching in economics) catalogued pluralist economics programmes in the UK: reteacheconomics.org/courses/
50/50 Don’t hesitate to criticize or complete this thread.
And don’t forget that the world is up to us and that we need pluralism to transform it.
Last but not least, take good care of yourself. 🙏
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Anne Eydoux, du CEET, prend la parole pour son intervention intitulée :
"Interventions publiques en temps de crise : l’impossible redevient pensable"
La crise sanitaire a été l'occasion d'intervention publique massive en rompant avec les dogmes budgétaires : "quoi qu'il en coute !".
Dans ce présentation il s'agira d'abord des politiques de l'emploi (notamment chômage partiel, 30Mi d'€, etc.) : L’État se retrouverait-il employeur en dernier ressort ?
L’apparition et le développement de la Covid 19 a profondément marqué la planète et met à l’épreuve les systèmes de santé : prise en charge des malades, production de vaccins, etc.
Or, depuis le début des années 1990, les politiques de santé s’alignent sur une approche mainstream : retrait de l’assurance maladie obligatoire, développement de l’assurance privée, développement d’instruments de gestion issus du secteur privé, etc. #pluralisme
1.L’intervention d’Hélène Tordjman s’intitule : « Transition écologique : une perception de la nature extractiviste et marchande »
2. Son livre, intitulé « La croissance verte contre la nature. Critique de l’écologie marchande » paraîtra en mars prochain aux Éditions La Découverte @Ed_LaDecouverte
3. D’ici là, nous vous conseillons de lire : « Dématérialiser la nature pour la faire entrer dans la sphère du marché », Document de travail du CEPN, Université Paris 13, n° 2018-12, hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01948581/d…
Robert Boyer, de l’Institut des Amériques (@idameriques), prend la parole pour présenter quelques thèses développées dans son livre :
« Les capitalismes à l’épreuve de la Pandémie »
A nouveau les économistes standards sont face à l’embarras face à la crise et sont cantonnés au silence. L'objectif de cette présentation sera de tirer les enseignements de la crise.
Cette crise n'est en rien comparable à la crise de 2008. Elle n'est pas liée à la pandémie mais à la décision de confiner. Il n'y a pas de récession mais bien plus un arrêt de l'économie.
Le monde va mal. La pandémie, nous allons en parler d’abord avec Robert Boyer qui a réussi à en faire une lecture en temps réel. Et avec la pandémie, le confinement, qui dévoile et révèle comme toutes les crises, et qui révèle la société facturée, les visibles et les invisibles.
1. Last december, our president Florence Jany-Catrice reminds Adrien de @Tricornot the lack of pluralism in the teaching of economics.
A thread on students’ struggles for pluralism in the teaching of economics at the university ⤵ xerficanal.com/strategie-mana…
2. To get started, we recommend you to read this paper, in which, among other things, A. Orléan @OrleanAndre distinguishes different ways of being pluralist in the teaching of political economy : variances.eu/?p=3626
3. In this paper, A. Orléan begins by recalling that, over the last 20 years, in France, the teaching of economics in higher education raised strong controversy.