Economic Justice: Race, Gender, Identity and Economics by Emma Coleman Jordan & Angela P. Harris

Written by:

Emma Coleman Jordan

Professor of Law
Georgetown University
Law Center

Angela P. Harris

Professor of Law
University of California,
Berkeley



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Table of Contents
Index
Table of Cases

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Economic Justice: Race, Gender, Identity and Economics at Foundation Press

Economic Justice: Race, Gender, Identity and Economics



       Economic Justice: Race, Gender, Identity and Economics is a new casebook, offered as a means to further the conversation between critical legal scholarship and law and economics. The phrase “economic justice” signals the authors’ aim to engage these two cultures, and to find the answer to questions, such as:

  • What can economics tell us about democracy and the law?
  • What can theories of justice tell us about economic theory and the law?
  • Why is there no legal language of “class” in the United States, and what might one look like?
Economic Justice: Race, Gender, Identity and Economics also uses the problem of racial and gender injustice as a site to interrogate both critical theory and economic theory. Just as race, gender, and class seem inextricably intertwined, economic and critical analysis both seem crucial to unraveling the knot of racial and gender inequality.


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This book is the answer for faculty teaching courses about discrimination and looking for materials that take seriously the problem of racial subordination and provide in-depth, rigorous analyses of economic frameworks that contribute to inequality.

A Woman's Place is in the Marketplace: Gender and Economics

If you teach sex discrimination, gender and the law, or feminist legal theory, this book is the missing piece of understandable economic thinking in your teaching materials.

Cultural Economics: Markets and Cultures

This book provides non-economists with tools to challenge economic orthodoxy and provide students the opportunity to explore the troublesome yet frequently ignored issues at the intersection of culture, race, gender and identity in the marketplace.

Beyond Rational Choice: Alternative Perspectives on Economics

Because neoclassical economics is no longer sufficient to explain the important questions of economic inequality, this book gives a non-economist tools to discuss the failings of orthodox economic assumptions and find viable alternative approaches.



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