What narratives are underrepresented in the history of economic thought? How do economists account for freedom, justice, and democracy in non-Western cultures? How are ideas in non-English speaking countries disseminated? This book answers these critical questions with contributions by authors from underrepresented backgrounds within economics.
Decolonial Narratives in Economics offers alternative perspectives to challenge mainstream rhetoric in economics that ignores the existence and significance of colonialism in knowledge production. Moving beyond monist narratives, authors engage in a pluralist conversation on ignored scholarships in the field that have theoretical and practical significance today. Expanding the scope of decoloniality in economics, the book questions coloniality as a research practice to better understand how it operates and to develop strategies to address the ethical issues associated with it. Ultimately, this book initiates a dialogue with authors who produce decolonial narratives within or about the nations and cultures that are underrepresented in economics.
Decolonial Narratives in Economics is an essential read for students and scholars of development economics, economic history, and political, radical and feminist economies, as well as politics, sociology, philosophy and cultural and indigenous studies.
págs. 1-14
World Development and interdisciplinarity: re-examining the economics silo
págs. 16-36
International inequalities and unheard voices: beyond the dominance of specific narratives in political economy and within the history of economic thought
págs. 37-54
Post-development approaches: criticisms and responses
págs. 55-78
Revisiting the history of the state bank of Georgia: a safeguard of Georgia’s short independence in 1918–1921
págs. 80-97
A crossroads of counternarratives: Dependencia meets institutional economics in the interwar Turkish Kadro movement
págs. 98-116
págs. 117-136
A decolonial global political economy digital transformation: the coloniality of global digital transformation policy and public-sector digital transformation’s material implications
págs. 138-158
Lessons in local economic expertise from Cybersyn in Chileand the reform and opening up in China: and why China (but not Chile) escaped “shock therapy”
págs. 159-182
Sacit Hadi Akdede
págs. 184-203
págs. 204-228
Collaboration, coercion and counteraction: BritishCentralisation Policy and 19th century “tax revolts” in Malaysia
págs. 229-252
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