Part I: Beginning prior to 1850. Indian women's agency through Indian women's literature / Sheetal Bharat -- English women's economic thought in the 1790s: domestic economy, married women's economic dependence, and access to professions / Joanna Rostek -- British women on the British empire / Janet Seiz -- Harriet Taylor Mill, Mary Paley Marshall and Beatrice Potter Webb: women economists and economists' wives / Virginie Gouverneur -- Japanese women's economics, 1818-2005 / Aiko Ikeo -- Part II: Beginning in the late 19th century. Contextualizing women's economic thought in late Imperial Russia and in the early years of revolution: 1870- 1920 -- Is equal pay worth it? Beatrice Potter Webb's, Millicent Garrett Fawcett's and Eleanor Rathbone's changing arguments / Cléo Chassonnery-Zaïgouche -- The economic thought of the Women's Co-operative Guild / Kirsten Madden and Joseph Persky -- Anecdotes of discrimination: barriers to women's participation in economic thought during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries / Kirsten Madden -- The point is to change it: three lives of applied Marxism / Zoe Sherman -- Part III: Beginning in the early 20th century. Women economists in the academy: struggles and strategies, 1900- 1940 / Mary Ann Dzuback -- Daughters of commons: Wisconsin women and institutionalism / Marianne Johnson -- Women economists of promise? Six Hart, Schaffner and Marx Prize winners in the early twentieth century / Kirsten Madden -- Early women economists at Columbia University: contributions in the struggle for labor protection in the Lochner era / Clara Elisabetta Mattei -- Chinese economic development and Chinese women economists: a study of overseas doctoral dissertations / Yue Xiao -- Part IV: Spanning the mid-20th century. Austrian School women economists / Giandomenica Becchio -- Placing women's economics within Soviet economic discourse: 1920s- 1991 / Anna Klimina -- Ursula Hicks' and Vera Lutz's contributions to development finance / Lucy Brillant -- The two faces of economic forecasting in Italy: Vera Cao Pinna and Almerina Ipsevich / Marcella Corsi and Giulia Zacchia -- Part V: Beginning mid-20th, extending into the 21st century. The first 100 years of female economists in sub-Saharan Africa / Lola Fowler and Robert W. Dimand -- Women economists of the Arab Homeland / Talia Yousef and Robert W. Dimand -- The invisible ones: women at CEPAL (1948- 2017) / Rebeca Gómez Betancourt and Camila Orozco Espinel -- Women's employment in the informal sector in developing countries: contributions of Lourdes Benería and Martha (Marty) Chen / Farida Chowdhury Khan -- Women's neoclassical models of marriage, 1972- 2015 / Shoshana Grossbard.
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The marginalization of women in economics has a history as long as the discipline itself. Throughout the history of economics, women have contributed substantial novel ideas, methods of inquiry, and analytical insights, with much of this discounted, ignored, or shifted into alternative disciplines and writing outlets. This handbook presents much-needed new analytical research of women's contributions in the history of economic thought. The book substantially expands on the global angle of our knowledge about women and the history of economic thought. Analysis continues to deepen in Europe and the US and extends into the Arab world, China, India, Japan, Latin America, Russia and the Soviet Union, and sub-Saharan Africa. Chapters address the experiences of women attempting to create knowledge in economics and explore women's contributions to economic analysis, method, policies, and debates. The book offers crucial new insights into previously underexplored work by women in the history of economic thought, and should prove to be a seminal volume with relevance beyond that field, into women's studies, sociology, and history.
ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK OF THE HISTORY OF WOMENS ECONOMIC THOUGHT.