The History of Economics Society is delighted to announce the winner of
this year's Joseph Dorfman Best Dissertation Prize:
Christina Laskaridis, 'Debt Sustainability: Towards a History of Theory,
Policy and Measurement' (SOAS, University of London)
The prize committee, consisting of Edward Nik-Khah (chair), Roni Hirsch
and Antonella Rancan, explained its decision as follows:
"Christina Laskaridis has written a superb dissertation on an urgent
topic.
Laskaridis’s specific focus is the history of Debt Sustainability
Analysis (DSA), as developed and put forward by the World Bank and the
IMF. It examines how and why DSA took root, as well as the political and
institutional stakes behind different approaches taken. Driving the
development and acceptance of these approaches was the age-old conflict
between debtors and creditors. The dissertation examines how the
practices of economists shaped this conflict, thereby offering a
compelling contribution to the history of quantification within the
social sciences and the history of economic practice.
Laskaridis has written a careful and meticulous history of an economics
done when the stakes are high. Such economics was informed by and
derived from practical needs; it was forged out of protest, geopolitical
struggle, political organizing, and efforts at international
collaboration and compromise. On this point, the work’s conclusion is
enlightening. It shows that compromise does not necessarily win the day,
but rather ideas that manage to bypass conflict, seeking the path of
least resistance when compromise is impossible. When created under such
conditions, ideas and practices often fail to meet either the needs of
the parties to the conflict or their stated purpose. Importantly, she
identifies the legacy of this conflict in a new field, the economics of
debt, default, and sustainability.
Laskaridis creatively uses the history of economics to address matters
of vital importance. In exposing the working of power within the
technocratic discourse of debt servicing, her dissertation maintains a
strong and clear authorial voice. We congratulate Christina Laskaridis
in her important and timely accomplishment"
Previous award winners can be found on the HES website at:
https://historyofeconomics.org/awards-and-honors/dorfman-dissertation-prize/
--
Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak
Secretary, History of Economics Society
Associate Professor, The American University of Paris
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