“We Are Capitalizing Your Adventure”
March 15, 2009 by smallin
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment
One Response
Leave a Reply
Open Economics
This blog is administered by a group of students and alumni from the University of Notre Dame who are interested in engaging and debating the world of economic phenomena we face, everywhere and everyday.Contact
openeconomicsnd@gmail.comEconomics at Notre Dame
Articles covering the department history and split "Hip Heterodoxy", "Taking On 'Rational Man'", "Notre Dame Loses", "Economics Split Divides Notre Dame", "Students Opposed Department Changes", "TPM: Heterodox and Mainstream Economics", "Blue Ribbon", "Academic Council Report",Blogroll
-
Recent Posts
- The Real Value to Society
- ‘Unperson’ Economists
- Transition to Capitalism and Overdetermination
- Robert Reich Gets It
- Thank You
- Gifting Paradox: Derrida and Neoclassical Econ
- China’s Great Leap and Its Contradictions
- The Inequality-Bubble Link
- Some Friday Links
- Keynes v. Hayek, Modern Disciples Edition (with Rap)
-
Top Posts
- 'Unperson' Economists
- 'Unperson' Economists
- The Real Value to Society
- A Heterodox Ranking of Econ PhD Programs
- "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs, starting on the first of never."
- Charity
- lunch break
- Can Neoclassical Economics Accept Explicit Normative Priors?
- Economics at Notre Dame
- Caritas in Veritate, Chapter Three
Tags
Add new tag Alternatives Anthropology Art behavioral economics Catholic Social Tradition class Comics Corporations Crime Culture Development ecological economics Economic Crisis Economic Debates Economic Fragments economics as science Education environmental economics equilibirum financial crisis Food policy Free Trade GDP globalization Healthcare human rights inequality informal economies Keynes Labor Local Economies markets Marxian Notre Dame pedagogy photography Poverty power Property Public Policy recession social action technology Weekly MeetingLinks of Interest
Pages
Archives
Meta

[...] it covers (looking at recent posts we see items on barter, changes to the discipline of economics, financial debates in popular culture, the debate between David Harvey — who works in anthropology department — and Brad [...]