Dear colleagues, we are very pleased to announce that the June 2022 issue of JHET is out. It contains six research articles covering a wide range of topics (and some of which published open access), and five very interesting book reviews. We are also very happy to have an interview with Margaret Schabas, by Harro Maas (with an intriguing and beautiful cover page). You can access the latest issue here: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-the-history-of-economic-thought/latest-issue (please remember that HES members have free access to JHET through the password protected area of the HES website) Volume 44 / Issue 2, June 2022 Articles The “Place of the Phillips Curve” in Macroeconometric Models: The Case of the Federal Reserve Board’s Model (1966–1980s) Antonella Rancan [Free Access] The Economics of Bernard Lonergan: Context, Modeling, and Assessment Paul Oslington Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, Development Economist Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak The Dissemination of Public Economics in Brazil at the Turn of the Twentieth Century: Rui Barbosa between Law-Making and Policy-Making Luiz Felipe Bruzzi Curi and Alexandre Mendes Cunha Idleness and the Very Sparing Hand of God: The Invisible Tie between Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion and Smith's Wealth of Nations Paolo Santori Crime and Punishment: Adam Smith’s Theory of Sentimental Law and Economics Maria Pia Paganelli and Fabrizio Simon [Free Access] Interview JHET Interviews: Margaret Schabas Harro Maas [Free Access] Book Reviews Nina Banks, ed., Democracy, Race, and Justice: The Speeches and Writings of Sadie T. M. Alexander Daniel Kuehn Michele Alacevich, Albert O. Hirschman: An Intellectual Biography Ana Maria Bianchi Peter J. Boettke, The Struggle for a Better World Mikayla Novak Kevin Deane and Elisa van Waeyenberge, eds., Recharting the History of Economic Thought Tiago Mata Ajit Sinha and Alex M. Thomas, eds., Pluralistic Economics and Its History Sharmin Khodaiji It is worth reminding you all that JHET's mission of fostering scholarship and promoting conversation among researchers interested in the history of economic thought and related disciplines is made possible by the support of the History of Economics Society (HES: https://historyofeconomics.org/) and of our publisher, Cambridge University Press. HES offers a wide range of services to our community beyond the journal. Your membership in the Society is instrumental in maintaining JHET and these other services. Please consider joining the society (https://historyofeconomics.org/about-the-society/why-become-a-member/). Best wishes, Pedro Duarte and Jimena Hurtado JHET Co-editors