CAMSHET: CAMBRIDGE SEMINAR IN THE HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT AT CLARE HALL
- Status
- laufend
The purpose of establishing a Cambridge Seminar in the History of Economic Thought is shared by
an international group of Life Members of Clare Hall, including Francesco Boldizzoni, Harald
Hagemann, Geoffrey Harcourt, Prue Kerr, Roberto Scazzieri and Albert Steenge. What will
characterize the Seminar’s approach to the history of economic theory is the conception of political
economy as a social discipline, that is, as a discipline principally devoted to the study of the nature,
production and distribution of income and the process of accumulation of wealth within society.
Some areas of the Seminar’s interests are:
• The Cambridge tradition of political economy after Marshall and Keynes including therelationship between production, distribution and social well-being in the medium- and
long-term, the links between economic dynamics, employment and structural change, and
the policy implications of that tradition for the early 21st century.
• Documenting and interpreting the histories of economic theory; the Seminar will fosterresearch interests from Antiquity to the present; its international dimension will enable it to
explore and foster the roles played by a range of different intellectual traditions in the
development of political economy.
• Issues in methodology and economic philosophy including the study of the formation oftheories in terms of frames of analysis, patterns of reasoning and empirical content. From
Aristotle to Rawls economic thought has been deeply concerned with ethical issues,
including justice and happiness. The stand taken on such themes (if not explicitly) underlies
the economist’s models and theoretical schemes. To be aware of this is the very premise for
an understanding of economic discourse.
The Seminar will organize a History of Economic Thought seminar, with talks to be given
on a regular basis. It will act as a reference point for economists, economic historians and
economic philosophers visiting the University of Cambridge. Speakers will include leading
scholars of the discipline as well as younger academics from all over the world. Scholars at
all levels, including students, are welcome to attend the seminars.