Heterodox Economics Newsletter
Issue 342 April 21, 2025 web pdf Heterodox Economics Directory
As heterodox economists, we are well aware that temporality and timing are key aspects in economic analysis. However, probably only a few of you are aware of the fact that the material covered in this newsletter occasionally shows specific and distinct temporal patterns. So let's reveal a thing or two about the inner rhythm of our work ;-)
For one, there are recurring seasonal patterns: In April, there are typically fewer conference calls, while invitations for Summer Schools show a steep rise. Doing justice to this surge, this issue collects several calls for highly interesting and topically diverse Summer Schools relevant for heterodox economic research and conceptualizing alternative forms of economic organization, which are all listed in the section on calls for participants (moreover, see here for an alternative educational option).
For another, we sometimes focus on temporally restricted outlier-observations representing important windows of opportunity: An example for such an item is the announcement on an experimental editorial policy of Econometrica, which now invites and allows for comments on recent articles with only minimal editorial screening and selection (see here). This experiment is dedicated to foster intensified exchange, debate, and controversy among economists and thereby provides an interesting opportunity for heterodox economists to engage with and challenge mainstream contributions.
Finally, we are – although general in outlook – not fully immune to comment on discursive trends in economics and economic policy. One such trendy topic in the last months has been US tariff policy. This topic has been addressed in recent editorials (see here and here) written before any concrete details on the implementation of Trump's tariff policy were known. While I surely did not (could not?) correctly anticipate the degree of confusion inherent in this implementation, I would assume that the erratic and arbitrary character of these tariff policies will exacerbate the potential downsides mentioned in my past rumblings – a diagnosis also emphasized by probably better qualified heterodox commentators on issues in international trade (see, e.g., here or here).* Moreover, this conveyed unreliability reinforces concerns that attacking science, civil rights, and the rule of law could prove detrimental to any economic ambitions the US might have in the future as it undermines key sources of the remaining comparative or absolute advantages of the US in international trade...
All the best,
Jakob
* To me, it is somewhat of a pity that Trump's demolition-man policy style could easily give additional credibility to a (similarly naive) mainstream view, which – following canonical models – emphasizes often-invoked doctrine of universal gains from free trade. In a similar vein, this policy currently undermines European efforts to ensure human rights and environmental preservation across global supply chains. From a heterodox perspective, one might argue that persistent technological asymmetries, the power of multinational corporations, the international financial architecture of tax evasion, and the potential disintegration of domestic markets as economies open to global competition all serve as good reason to discuss how to sensibly regulate international trade using tariffs as one traditional tool. By tying tariffs to other intuitions associated with Trump, like tyranny, confusion, and inconsistency, the former are put in a much more shady light as is justified by historically informed and differentiated analysis.
© public domain
Table of contents
- Call for Papers
- 73th Annual Conference of the Japan Society of Political Economy: “Capitalism and Populism in the 21st Century, The Welfare State Today” (Aichi (Japan), October 2025)
- "Review of Agrarian Studies" invites submissions
- "The Economic and Labour Relations Review" invites submissions
- 18th Annual Forum of the World Association for Political Economy (WAPE) (Aug., Istanbul)
- 22th. Annual Historical Materialism London Conference: Resurgent Reaction -Marxist Strategies at the End of the Liberal Order (London, November 2025)
- 31st Annual conference on Alternative Economic Policy in Europe: CfP on “Europe Quo Vadis: Militarisation or socio-ecological transformation?” (Sept. 2025, Athen)
- 6th Pluralumn* Workshop (Hamburg, August 2025)
- Joint HES-AFEE Session @ ASSA 2026 (Philadelphia, Jan. 2026)
- Out of Order? Critical Reflections on Big Tech, Inequalities and Digital Futures (Sheffield, 27 June 2025)
- URPE @ ASSA 2026 (Philadelphia, Jan. 2026)
- WINIR 2025: "Institutions, Entrepreneurship & Shared Prosperity" (Prague, September 2025)
- Winter Institute for the History and Philosophy of Economics (Austin/Texas, Dec. 2025)
- YSI-Workshop on "The Untold Stories Behind Financial Crises (1825–2025): Plurality of Causes and Multidimensional Consequences" (Lyon, Dec. 2025)
- Call for Participants
- 14th Post Keynesian Economics Society Summer School (June 2025, London)
- 27th Summer School on History of Economic Thought, Economic Philosophy and Economic History on “Capitalism, Democracy and Justice” (Sep. 2025, Rome)
- 32nd Annual Levy Institute Conference (June 2025, New York)
- AKB/PKES webinar on the green transition (April 2025, online)
- Capitalism to Come? Oligarchy, Violence and the New Imperialisms (online/Leeds, 15 May 2025)
- Conference on "Trade Unions and University Research: Collaborating to make work better" (online/Nottingham, June 2025)
- Hierarchies and fragilities in growth models: finance, gender, and business strategies (London, May 2025)
- Poznan Post-Keynesian Worskhops (Poznań, June 2025)
- Rethinking Economics Summer School Switzerland: Economics as Resistance Heterodox Strategies on Housing, Energy, and Agriculture against the New Right (Chandolin, August 2025)
- Summer University: „Alternative Economic and Monetary Systems (AEMS)“ (Vienna, July-Aug. 2025,)
- Workshop on "Critical Innovation Studies" (online/London, May 2025)
- Workshop on Alternative Macroeconomic Theories: Developing Countries and Türkiye (Ankara, July 2025)
- YSI-EAEPE Summer School 2025: Reimagining Migration Economics through a Pluralist Lens (Rome, June/July 2025)
- Conference Papers, Reports, and Podcasts
- 2025 David Gordon Memorial Lecture on YouTube
- Ceteris Never Paribus Podcast: Series on Supervision
- Smith and Marx Walk into a Bar: A History of Economics Podcast: Episode 89
- Job Postings
- Karlshochschule, Germany
- Lund University, Sweden
- University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- University of Oxford, UK (1/2)
- University of Oxford, UK (2/2)
- University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
- Utrecht University, NL
- Awards
- "Pierangelo Garegnani" Thesis Prize 2025
- Call for Nominations: AISPE Awards
- Journals
- Cambridge Journal of Economics 49 (2)
- Ecological Economics 233
- Feminist Economics 31 (1)
- GAIA - Ecological Perspectives for Science and Society 1/2025
- International Critical Thought 15 (1)
- International Review of Applied Economics 39 (1)
- Journal of Law and Political Economy 5 (1)
- Metroeconomica 76 (2)
- The Economic and Labour Relations Review 35 (4)
- The Review of Austrian Economics 38 (1)
- Books and Book Series
- Advanced Introduction to the Economics of Organization
- Decent Work and the Sustainable Development Goals - Elgar Companions to the Sustainable Development Goals series
- Decolonizing Feminist Economics: Possibilities for Just Futures
- Gendering the Political Economy of Labour Market Policies
- Handbook of Progressive Politics
- In and against Development: From New to Newest Development Economics - Critical Reconstructions of Political Economy, Volume 5
- Legal and Political Foundations of Capitalism - The End of Laissez Faire?
- Managing Growth in Miniature: Solow's Model as an Artifact
- Marxist Political Economy and Bourdieu: Economic and Cultural Capital, Classes and State
- Relocating Development Economics: The First Generation of Modern Indian Economists
- Social Investment and Institutional Change
- Socialist Economic Systems: 21st Century Pathways
- The Late Marx’s Revolutionary Roads: On Colonialism, Gender, and Indigenous Communism
- The Rise and Fall of Neoliberal Rentier Capitalism
- Heterodox Graduate Programs, Scholarships and Grants
- Call for Applications: Frederic S. Lee Heterodox Economics Scholarship
- Calls for Support
- Call for Support: EuroMemo 2025
- For Your Information
- Apply to the Rethinking Economics Activity Fund
- Econometrica: A New Experiment
- School of Political Economy: New Course Start