WAPE 2020 CfP for Panel: ‘Dialogue on economics curriculum reform between Chinese and Western Scholars’
15th WAPE Forum 31-July – 2 August 2020 Panteion University, Athens, Greece
http://politicaleconomy.gr/Wapeforum2020/
https://poleconom.wordpress.com/world-association-of-political-economy-15th-forum-athens-2020/
Call for papers for panel
‘Dialogue on economics curriculum reform between Chinese and Western Scholars’
Dear Friends
We cordially invite you to submit proposals for papers on curriculum reform and economics teaching, for a discussion at the forthcoming conference of the World Association for Political Economy (WAPE), which will be held in Athens from 31st July to 2nd August, and is hosted by the Greek Association of Political Economy and Panteion University
WAPE’s annual conferences have for sixteen years been unique opportunities for collaboration and exchange between Chinese and Western scholars and its two peer-reviewed English language journals, World Review of Political Economy and International Critical Thought, are securing growing recognition. We attach the call for papers which can also be accessed at: http://bit.ly/30jdVpJ
During the recent decades Mainstream Economics are exerting an increasingly suffocating dominance upon the study of the economy within the academia. Their utterly conservative, pro-capital, but methodologically unrealistic perspective – despite its flagrant failures – displaces every other alternative perspective and particularly that of Political Economy. Despite numerous attempts, especially by students disenchanted by the arteriosclerotic Mainstream perspective, for a more open and pluralistic landscape in economics curricula this stranglehold continues unabated. It is time for the Political Economy tradition to increase its efforts for the reversal of this dismal situation.
This issue is at the core of the forthcoming 15th WAPE Athens conference.
This year’s event is a unique opportunity for European heterodox economists of plural perspectives, both because the conference – which is held in a different city each year – is in an easily accessible and pivotal location, and because of the growing concern, in China, with the content of formal economics teaching and its domination by monotheoretic, neoliberal ideas.
We think this provides an opportunity for Western heterodox economic scholars of different theoretical perspectives, who have long been concerned with the way economics is taught, to engage with their Chinese counterparts.
We invite proposals for papers on this topic.