This paper offers a historical perspective on economists’ treatment of women, through exploring the case of Paul Samuelson. Some of his remarks about women in the economy and in economics were famously considered deprecatory. We replace them in the context of the discussions of discrimination in his textbook, Economics, and his interactions with female students and colleagues. Drawing on correspondence as well as published work, the paper reveals a complex set of attitudes: Samuelson recognized very early that women were held back by discrimination and wrote about it with a depth not seen in other textbooks. But his experience and support of women he knew did not mitigate some of the prejudices he held about women in general. It was when ch...
The Subjection of Women was the last book by John Stuart Hill published during his lifetime. It pres...
In the past two decades gender pay differences have narrowed considerably and a declining significan...
THE field of women-in-development (henceforth, w-i-d) is an evolving one. Its journey – which began ...
Paul Samuelson’s widely quoted deprecatory remarks about female economists are discussed in the cont...
We look at Paul A. Samuelson’s 1958 article “An Exact Consumption-Loan Model of Interest With or Wit...
The paper presents the economic literature on gender bias, illustrating the underpinnings in the psy...
the definition of discrimination used by econo-mists today: a premium required to interact with a me...
The main purpose of this paper is to clarify the history of ≪The Economics of Discriminaton≫ in Unit...
The gender gap in economics science is worse than in other disciplines. Are women treated differentl...
"J. S. Mill on Wages and Women" questions the common belief that Mill, despite his feminism, never s...
This article analyzes a series of class action employment discrimination cases that have arisen in t...
Becker’s Ph.D. thesis on discrimination is commonly viewed as an expression of economics imperialism...
Abstract: This paper explores the unintended gendered consequences of varieties of capitalism. It d...
My Broadview Press critical edition of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Women and Economics offers scholar...
In this chapter I review the contributions to utility theory that Samuelson made when he was a Ph.D....
The Subjection of Women was the last book by John Stuart Hill published during his lifetime. It pres...
In the past two decades gender pay differences have narrowed considerably and a declining significan...
THE field of women-in-development (henceforth, w-i-d) is an evolving one. Its journey – which began ...
Paul Samuelson’s widely quoted deprecatory remarks about female economists are discussed in the cont...
We look at Paul A. Samuelson’s 1958 article “An Exact Consumption-Loan Model of Interest With or Wit...
The paper presents the economic literature on gender bias, illustrating the underpinnings in the psy...
the definition of discrimination used by econo-mists today: a premium required to interact with a me...
The main purpose of this paper is to clarify the history of ≪The Economics of Discriminaton≫ in Unit...
The gender gap in economics science is worse than in other disciplines. Are women treated differentl...
"J. S. Mill on Wages and Women" questions the common belief that Mill, despite his feminism, never s...
This article analyzes a series of class action employment discrimination cases that have arisen in t...
Becker’s Ph.D. thesis on discrimination is commonly viewed as an expression of economics imperialism...
Abstract: This paper explores the unintended gendered consequences of varieties of capitalism. It d...
My Broadview Press critical edition of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Women and Economics offers scholar...
In this chapter I review the contributions to utility theory that Samuelson made when he was a Ph.D....
The Subjection of Women was the last book by John Stuart Hill published during his lifetime. It pres...
In the past two decades gender pay differences have narrowed considerably and a declining significan...
THE field of women-in-development (henceforth, w-i-d) is an evolving one. Its journey – which began ...