
300,000 women are missing from economics
Economics is an overwhelmingly male field; and the problem is not going away. Less than a third of economics students today are women. A pervasive myth about the missing women students in...
Samuel Bowles (PhD Economics, Harvard) is at the Santa Fe Institute. He recently published The Moral Economy: Why good incentives are no substitute for good citizens (Yale University Press) where the issues raised here are more fully explored, and is one the authors of The Economy, a free online introduction to economics by the Curriculum Open Access Resources for Economics (CORE) Project (www.core-econ.org). He is the author of Microeconomics: Behavior, Institutions, and Evolution, and coauthor with Herbert Gintis of A Cooperative Species: Human reciprocity and its evolution. In addition to the usual economics journals his research appears in Science, Nature, Behavior and Brain Science, Current Anthropology, Journal of Theoretical Biology, and Philosophy and Public Affairs. He has also advised Senator Robert Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, President Nelson Mandela and members of the New Mexico state legislature on economic policy.
Economics is an overwhelmingly male field; and the problem is not going away. Less than a third of economics students today are women. A pervasive myth about the missing women students in...
The main message of Richard Titmuss’ influential The Gift Relationship: From Human Blood to Social Policy (Titmuss 1971) was this: the use of economic incentives to advance social objecti...