Heterodox economics movement: Difference between revisions

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==Preface==
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The ''Heterodox Traditions'' in Economics began when [http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/rousseau.htm Jean-Jacques Rousseau] ,  a Swiss political philosopher of the Enlightenment and purported father of the French Revolution, wrote his book ''Discourse on Political Economy'' (Economie Politique) (1755)<ref name=ROSSEAU1>''l'ENCYCLOPÉDIE,OU DICTIONNAIRE RAISONNÉ DES SCIENCES, DES ARTS ET DES MÉTIERS par une Société de Gens de Lettres''. Mis en ordre & publié par M. DIDEROT, de l'Académie des Sciences & des Belles-Lettres de Prusse;Paris, Briasson..., 1755</ref> which became the entry on the subject in Diderot's Encyclopedie.


==Utopians and Socialists==
'''Heterodox economics''' refers to a relatively small but growing ''movement'' among economists who are seeking to gain acceptance of their ideas into mainstream economic thinking and scholarly discourse.  Thinkers within the movement seek to organize various economic traditions, including post-Keynesianism, old institutionalism, feminist, social, and Marxian and Austrian economics under its new umbrella, according to the movement's view of what such traditions hold in common. In doing so, the heterodox economics movement seeks to distinguish its conceptualizations from what it views as "mainstream economics", which the movement engages yet opposes on some fundamental concepts.


===Rousseauvian Socialism===
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==History of the movement==


===Utopian Socialism===
==Views==


===Ricardian Socialism===
==Criticisms==
 
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===Saint-Simonism===
 
===Revolutionary Anarcho-Socialism===
 
===Marxist Socialism===
 
===Young Hegelians and State Socialism===
 
===Christian Socialism===
 
===American Populists and Socialists===
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 12:09, 3 November 2007

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Heterodox economics refers to a relatively small but growing movement among economists who are seeking to gain acceptance of their ideas into mainstream economic thinking and scholarly discourse. Thinkers within the movement seek to organize various economic traditions, including post-Keynesianism, old institutionalism, feminist, social, and Marxian and Austrian economics under its new umbrella, according to the movement's view of what such traditions hold in common. In doing so, the heterodox economics movement seeks to distinguish its conceptualizations from what it views as "mainstream economics", which the movement engages yet opposes on some fundamental concepts.