Dear all,

Please note that to submit an abstract for this call, a profile first needs
to be created on the YSI Young Scholars Directory (YSD) where the abstract
then needs to be submitted. The link provided in the call will promt to
register, i.e create a profile (if one is not already logged in as member).
If not taken automatically to the submission page after that, please use
the link again. Below the call again with that information.

Thanks and all the best,
Jérôme



The *YSI *HIstory of Economic Thought Working Group invites submissions to
the History of (Asian) Economic Thought stream at the YSI Asia Convening
<https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/ysi-asia-regional-convening-2019> in
Da Nang, Vietnam, 6-9 May 2019.

Please note: very short deadline: 17th of March

We would be very grateful if you could circulate this call in your
networks, especially in Asia.
------------------------------

THE HISTORY OF ASIAN ECONOMIC THOUGHT FROM GUAN ZHONG TO A. K. BAGCHI

The economic thought of ancient Chinese scholars has been studied for many
years in China. There is even a Chinese scholarly society dedicated to this
field of study. In Japan the subject has also been studied to some extent.
Some recent volumes in English (Hu 1984, 1988; Wu 1996; Ma and Trautwein
2013; Lin, Peach and Wang 2014) show the vitality and diversity of ancient
Chinese thought on economic matters and the presence of many ideas familiar
from Western thinkers at earlier moments in Chinese thought.

Yet knowledge of the ideas of Chinese thinkers on economic matters remains
extremely sparse outside East-Asia and availability of texts on the history
of Chinese economic thought in English remains extremely limited. The same
can be said about the economic thought of Indian philosophers since at
least the 4th century B.C. Chanakya (Kautilya), although the language
barrier here should be much less of a reason, as well as the economic
thought of the ancient Persians, Mongols and other Asian nations. Around
the world, the canon of the history of economic thought taught to economics
(and other) students continues to be limited to the ideas of scholars from
Europe and European settler colonies.

The YSI History of Economic Thought Working Group invites early-career
researchers based in Asia to submit contributions to this internationally
severely understudied subject area:

   -

   *The economic thought of Asian scholars from all epochs, from ancient
   philosophers, political thinkers and mystics to modern economists*
   -

   *The economic ideas contained in Asian philosophical, religious and
   political doctrines like Confusianism, Taoism, Legalism, Hinduism, Jainism,
   Vedism, Buddism, Shintoism, Ghandian Socialism, Maoism*
   -

   *Studies on the historic exchange of economic ideas between Asia and
   other regions, the cross-influence between different Asian thinkers or
   between Asian and non-Asian scholars on economic matters and comparative
   studies of their theories*

Other contributions in the history of economic thought from young scholars
based in Asia shall also be considered.
------------------------------

Please submit abstracts *here <https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/rc/asia>.**

Travel support is available for young scholars travelling from within Asia.

Deadline: 17th of March.

* A profile needs to be created on the YSD first in order to submit. If not
already registered, on the promt that opens with the link, please click
"Become a member of YSI" and create a profile. If not automatically
directed to the submission page after that, please use the link again and
log into your newly created profile on prompt.


Refs.:

Hu, Jichuang. 1984. *Chinese Economic Thought before the Seventeenth
Century*. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
---------------. 1988. *A Concise History of Chinese Economic Thought*.
Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
Lin, Cheng, Terry Peach and Wang Fang (eds). 2014. *The History of Ancient
Chinese Economic Thought*. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.
Ma, Ying and Hans-Michael Trautwein (eds). 2013. *Thoughts on Economic
Development in China*. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.
Wu, Baosan. 1996. *History of Economic Thought in the Pre-Qin Period*.
Beijing: China Social Sciences Press.


>
>
>
> From: Jérôme Lange <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: Tue, Mar 5, 2019 at 9:10 PM
> Subject: [SHOE] Call for Papers: History of Asian Economic Thought at YSI
> Asia Convening
> To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
>
>
> Dear all,
>
> The *YSI *HIstory of Economic Thought Working Group invites submissions
> to the History of (Asian) Economic Thought stream at the YSI Asia
> Convening
> <https://www.ineteconomics.org/events/ysi-asia-regional-convening-2019>
> in Da Nang, Vietnam, 6-9 May 2019.
>
> Please note: very short deadline: 17th of March
>
> We would be very grateful if you could circulate this call in your
> networks, especially in Asia.
> ------------------------------
>
> THE HISTORY OF ASIAN ECONOMIC THOUGHT FROM GUAN ZHONG TO A. K. BAGCHI
>
> The economic thought of ancient Chinese scholars has been studied for many
> years in China. There is even a Chinese scholarly society dedicated to this
> field of study. In Japan the subject has also been studied to some extent.
> Some recent volumes in English (Hu 1984, 1988; Wu 1996; Ma and Trautwein
> 2013; Lin, Peach and Wang 2014) show the vitality and diversity of ancient
> Chinese thought on economic matters and the presence of many ideas familiar
> from Western thinkers at earlier moments in Chinese thought.
>
> Yet knowledge of the ideas of Chinese thinkers on economic matters remains
> extremely sparse outside East-Asia and availability of texts on the history
> of Chinese economic thought in English remains extremely limited. The same
> can be said about the economic thought of Indian philosophers since at
> least the 4th century B.C. Chanakya (Kautilya), although the language
> barrier here should be much less of a reason, as well as the economic
> thought of the ancient Persians, Mongols and other Asian nations. Around
> the world, the canon of the history of economic thought taught to economics
> (and other) students continues to be limited to the ideas of scholars from
> Europe and European settler colonies.
>
> The YSI History of Economic Thought Working Group invites early-career
> researchers based in Asia to submit contributions to this internationally
> severely understudied subject area:
>
>    -
>
>    *The economic thought of Asian scholars from all epochs, from ancient
>    philosophers, political thinkers and mystics to modern economists*
>    -
>
>    *The economic ideas contained in Asian philosophical, religious and
>    political doctrines like Confusianism, Taoism, Legalism, Hinduism, Jainism,
>    Vedism, Buddism, Shintoism, Ghandian Socialism, Maoism*
>    -
>
>    *Studies on the historic exchange of economic ideas between Asia and
>    other regions, the cross-influence between different Asian thinkers or
>    between Asian and non-Asian scholars on economic matters and comparative
>    studies of their theories*
>
> Other contributions in the history of economic thought from young scholars
> based in Asia shall also be considered.
> ------------------------------
>
> Please submit abstracts *here <https://ysd.ineteconomics.org/rc/asia>.*
>
> Travel support is available for young scholars travelling from within Asia.
>
> Deadline: 17th of March.
> ------------------------------
>
> Refs.:
>
> Hu, Jichuang. 1984. *Chinese Economic Thought before the Seventeenth
> Century*. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
> ---------------. 1988. *A Concise History of Chinese Economic Thought*.
> Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
> Lin, Cheng, Terry Peach and Wang Fang (eds). 2014. *The History of
> Ancient Chinese Economic Thought*. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.
> Ma, Ying and Hans-Michael Trautwein (eds). 2013. *Thoughts on Economic
> Development in China*. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.
> Wu, Baosan. 1996. *History of Economic Thought in the Pre-Qin Period*.
> Beijing: China Social Sciences Press.
>