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Societies for the History of Economics

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Subject:
From:
Catherine Herfeld <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 19 Jun 2019 04:38:36 -0400
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EXTENSION OF DEADLINE until June 30 of the Call for Papers for the following conference:

THE SOUL OF ECONOMICS

Location: University of Zurich, Switzerland

Date: September 9-11, 2019

Website: https://soulofeconomics2019.weebly.com

List of confirmed invited speakers
Erik Angner (Stockholm University)
Alvin Birdi (University of Bristol)
Beatrice Cherrier (CNRS & THEMA, University of Cergy Pontoise)
Kevin Hoover (Duke University)
Shabnam Mousavi (Max Planck Institute for Human Development)
Andreas Ortmann (University of South Wales)
Don Ross (University of Cork)

(additional speakers to be confirmed)

****************

The occasion for this conference is the 10-year passing of the global financial crisis in 2007-08. The 
emphasis lies in particular on debates that have sparked or revived issues concerning the main 
constituents of the ‘soul of economics’ and have provoked new questions about the nature of this 
soul. More specifically, we focus mainly on questions that have been raised within but also outside 
the economics profession about some of the constituents of this soul, namely the discipline’s 
theoretical foundations, the desirability of old and new modeling tools, the role of empirical analysis 
in economics, and the usefulness of research programs such as behavioral economics, among many 
others. We furthermore address questions the crisis has provoked concerning the lack of public trust 
in economics and how to regain it. 
To enable a fruitful debate about those questions, the main goal of the conference is to provide a 
platform for economists, philosophers of economics, sociologists of economics, and historians of 
recent economics to push the examination that underlies this soul searching further. This will help us, 
in turn, to better understand where economics is headed in the near future. We attribute the major 
issues under discussion to the following three areas within which there is ongoing disagreement 
among economists: 
1) the debate in macroeconomics about the usefulness of DSGE models and the demand for 
microfoundations; 2) the discussion of the status and usefulness of behavioral economics and how it 
theoretically and conceptually differs from neoclassical economics; and, 3) the debate about the role 
of methodological consensus to regain public trust in economic expertise (for more specified 
questions we will address in each area, see conference website).

While we are also interested in papers that are concerned with other issues related to the conference 
topic, we are especially keen on receiving papers that address any of these issues. For each area, 
keynote speakers will discuss issues arising in those areas from an economic, a philosophical, and a 
historical perspective. We therefore welcome papers using systematic and conceptual approaches, 
case study analysis and historical approaches more generally, as well as sociological approaches.


Dates and deadlines
We invite submissions of contributed papers. Submissions should contain a title, a short abstract of 
100 words (copied in the body of the email), and an extended abstract of up to 500 words. The 
abstracts should be prepared for blind review and submitted via the Easychair system the latest by 
June 30, 2019. Authors will be notified shortly thereafter.


Organising Committee 
Charles Djordjevic (University of Zurich)
Catherine Herfeld (University of Zurich)
Chiara Lisciandra (University of Groningen) 
Carlo Martini (University of Helsinki)

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