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[Posted on behalf of Mat Forstater. - RBE]
Marie - It may or may not be "eminently suitable" for "mathematical
formulation and formal diagramming," but an important question is whether
it is at all suitable for the analysis of racial inequality. (You may get
hints for
developing a formal model and constructing diagrams yourself from the
formal treatments of Kaldor's work on cumulative causation--see his papers
on slow growth in the U.K. and the work of Thirlwall and his students.)
You might look at the critiques of Myrdal: start with the ones by Oliver
Cromwell Cox in _Caste, Class, and Race_ (and excerpted in Darity's edited
volumes on _The Economics of Discrimination_) and Stephen Steinberg in
_Turning Back: The Retreat From Racial Justice in American Thought and
Policy_.
Mat Forstater
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