Siobhan Austen is Associate Professor in the School of Economics and Finance, and Director of Women in Social and Economic Research (WiSER) at Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia. She works on feminist and institutional economics, with a particular focus on the circumstances and experiences of women in labor markets.
Tuna Baskoy is Associate Professor in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada. He is the author of The Political Economy of European Union Competition Policy: A Case Study of the Telecommunications Industry (Routledge, 2008) and director of the interdisciplinary PhD Program in Policy Studies at Ryerson University. He has been working on market governance and competition/antitrust policy in information and communication technology industries, and hazelnut market from institutionalist and Post Keynesian perspectives.
Jordan Brennan received his doctorate in political science from York University in Toronto, Canada. He works as an economist for Unifor, Canada’s largest labor union in the private sector. In 2016–17, Jordan will be a visiting scholar at Harvard Law School. More information is available on his website: www.jordanbrennan.org.
Gabriel Brondino is Lecturer of Political Economy at The School of Social and Juridical Sciences of National University of Litoral, Argentina. He has been working on international trade, economic growth, and structural change from classical and Keynesian perspectives.
Scott Carter is Associate Professor of Economics at The University of Tulsa in Oklahoma, USA. His research interests concern comparative heterodox theories of value, distribution, and growth, and Sraffian and Marxian political economy, with emphasis on the unpublished papers of Piero Sraffa.
Lynne Chester is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Economy at The University of Sydney, Australia. Her research focuses on the application of Régulation theory to a range of energy issues (affordability, security, markets, price formation, the environment), and the policy responses of capitalist economies through different institutional forms.
Marcella Corsi is Full Professor of Economics at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. Her research mainly focuses on issues related to social inclusion, social protection, and income distribution (often in a gender perspective). In these fields of study, she is the author of several articles published in English and Italian, and she has been one of the scientific coordinators of the European Network of Gender Equality Experts (www.enege.eu).
Andrew Cumbers is Professor of Regional Political Economy in the Adam Smith Business School at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. He is a Managing Editor of Urban Studies since 2005 and is author of Reclaiming Public Ownership: Making Space for Economic Democracy (Zed Books). He is currently working with Robert McMaster, Susan Cabaço, and Michael White on developing an index of economic democracy.
Carlo D’Ippoliti is Associate Professor of Economics at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. He is the editor of PSL Quarterly Review and of Moneta e Credito. His research focuses on the history of economic thought, feminist economics, and European political economy.
Petra Dünhaupt is a research associate and a member of the Institute for International Political Economy (IPE) at the Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany. Her research focuses on financialization and income distribution.
Anders Ekeland is senior advisor at Statistics Norway, member of the Management Committee of the Association for Heterodox Economics since 2011. He has been working on economic theory, innovation, and environmental policies from Marxian and Schumpeterian perspectives.
John Embery works at Leeds Beckett University, UK. He lectures on political economy and behavioral economics. He is currently working on a PhD in social economics. His research interests include heterodox approaches to shared agency, social networks, and time preference.
Víctor Ramiro Fernández is Full Professor of State Theory and Economic Geography at the School of Humanities and Sciences of the National University of Litoral, Argentina. He is Director of the Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences of Litoral (CONICET-UNL). His main work focuses on the state and its relation to development from a multidisciplinary perspective (historical materialism, critical geography, Latin American structuralism).
Claudius Gräbner is a Post-Doc researcher at the Institute for the Comprehensive Analysis of the Economy (ICAE) at Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria. He obtained his PhD in economics at the Institute for Institutional and Innovation Economics at the University of Bremen, Germany. His research focuses on international and development economics, agent-based computational modeling, network analysis, and economic methodology from a complexity and evolutionary-institutional perspective.
Giulio Guarini is Assistant Professor of Economics at Tuscia University of Viterbo, Italy. He has been working on economic development, social inclusion, innovation, and sustainability from Post Keynesian and Capability Approach perspectives.
Eckhard Hein is Professor of Economics at the Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany, a Co-Director of the Institute for International Political Economy (IPE), and managing coeditor of the European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention. His research focuses on money, financial systems, distribution and growth, European economic policies, and Post Keynesian macroeconomics.
John F. Henry is currently Senior Scholar at Levy Economics Institute, USA. Formerly, he served as Research Professor, University of Missouri-Kansas City, and is Professor Emeritus, California State University, Sacramento. His work centers on Marx, Veblen, institutionalism, and Post Keynesian theory. Henry is the 2017 Veblen-Commons Award recipient from the Association for Evolutionary Economics.
Elizabeth Hill is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Political Economy at The University of Sydney, Australia. Hill’s research focuses on gender, work, and care in emerging and developed economies. She has published on women’s work and collective action in the Indian informal economy, and work and care policy in Australia.
Tae-Hee Jo is Associate Professor in the Economics and Finance Department at The State University of New York–Buffalo State, USA and a former Editor of the Heterodox Economics Newsletter (2009–13). He has been working on heterodox microeconomic theory from institutionalist, Marxian, and Post Keynesian perspectives.
Jakob Kapeller is a philosopher and economist at Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria. He is the Head of Department at the Institute for Comprehensive Analysis of the Economy (www.jku.at/icae) and serves as Editor of the Heterodox Economics Newsletter.
Anna Klimina is Associate Professor in the Economics Department at St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan, Canada. Her primary research interests include economics of post-Soviet transition, seen through institutionalist and Post Keynesian perspectives, and history of Russian economic thought.
Agnès Labrousse is Associate Professor in Economics at the University of Picardie, France, and Associate Editor of The Régulation Review. She has been working on Eastern Germany, the pharmaceutical industry, and development issues from an institutionalist perspective.
Yan Liang is Associate Professor of Economics at Willamette University, USA. She is on the editorial board of Journal of Economic Issues and The Chinese Economy. She has been working on financial macroeconomics, economic development, and international finance from the Post Keynesian and institutionalist perspectives.
John Marangos is a Professor of Comparative Economic Systems at the Department of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies at the University of Macedonia in Greece and former editor of the Forum of Social Economics (2006–11). Focal points of his research are the transition process, international development, and innovative methodologies for teaching economics.
John Marsh is a Senior Lecturer in Economics at Nottingham Trent University, UK. He is especially interested in the history of economic thought, Keynesian economics, and its influence on modern-day macroeconomics.
Wesley C. Marshall is a full professor-researcher at the UAM–Iztapalapa, Mexico. He is an associate editor of the International Journal of Political Economy and is a member of the editorial board of Ola Financiera. His interests are banking, the history of economic thought, and recent economic history.
Nuno Ornelas Martins is a Lecturer in Economics at the Católica Porto Business School, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal. He is also a researcher at Centro de Estudos de Gestão e Economia, and a member of the Cambridge Social Ontology Group.
Robert McMaster is Professor of Political Economy in the Adam Smith Business School at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. He has been a co-editor of the Review of Social Economy since 2005. He is currently working with Andrew Cumbers, Susan Cabaço, and Michael White on developing an index of economic democracy.
Sandrine Michel is Professor in Economics at the University of Montpellier, France. She investigates economic growth over the long-run in relation to structural change, notably the contribution of education and social services to the overcoming of crises, using quantitative and historical methods.
Jamie Morgan works at Leeds Beckett University, UK. He is the former coordinator of the Association for Heterodox Economics and edits Real World Economics Review with Edward Full-brook. He has published widely in economics, political economy, sociology, philosophy, and area studies. He is currently working on problems of taxation of multinational corporations, as well as institutional iteration effects of financial stability.
Özgür Orhangazi is Associate Professor of Economics at Kadir Has University, Turkey. He is the author of Financialization and the US Economy (2008) and numerous articles and book chapters on financialization, financial crises, and alternative economic policies.
Bruce Philp is the Head of the Department of Strategy, Marketing and Economics at Birmingham City University, UK. He is interested in political economy and his research focuses on contemporary labor market issues, especially concerning the UK and EU economies.
Bent Arne Sæther is specialist director in the Norwegian Ministry of Climate and Environment, with more than two decades of experience from work on mainstream environmental economics, including critique from an ecological economics perspective.
Timothy Sharpe is Lecturer of Economics at the University of Newcastle, Australia, and Research Scholar at the Binzagr Institute for Sustainable Prosperity. His research is motivated by contemporary macroeconomic policy debates vis-à-vis the conduct of fiscal and monetary policy among advanced economies.
Ajit Sinha is Professor at Azim Premji University, Bangalore, India. He is the author of Theories of Value from Adam Smith to Piero Sraffa and A Revolution in Economic Theory: The Economics of Piero Sraffa. He has published extensively in the area of history of economic theory.
Lorraine Talbot is Professor of Company Law in Context at the University of York, UK. She is the Coordinating Lead Author of the International Panel for Social Progress based in Princeton University. Professor Talbot was awarded a Leverhulme Fellowship from 2015–17 to analyze the corporate form and to set out such reforms that will ensure the corporation meets social progress goals.
Pavlina R. Tcherneva is Chair and Associate Professor of Economics, Bard College, USA and Research Scholar at the Levy Economics Institute. She is an early contributor to Modern Monetary Theory, with a focus on rethinking conventional macroeconomic stabilization policies.
Zdravka Todorova is Associate Professor in the Economics Department at Wright State University, USA. She has been working on heterodox economic theory combining a number of perspectives including institutionalist, Post Keynesian, and feminist.
Radha Upadhyaya is Research Fellow at the Institute for Development Studies, University of Nairobi, Kenya. Radha has over 12 years of teaching experience with particular focus on heterodox research methods, microeconomics, and finance and development. She has written on the Kenyan banking sector, banking regulation in East Africa, and African entrepreneurship.
Ramaa Vasudevan is Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at Colorado State University, USA and is on the Editorial Board of the Review of Radical Political Economics. She works on understanding capitalist dynamics from Marxian and Post Keynesian perspectives. She also works on the political economy of money and finance.
Matías Vernengo is Full Professor at Bucknell University, USA. He was formerly Senior Research Manager at the Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA), an external consultant to several United Nations organizations, and is the co-editor of the Review of Keynesian Economics and the editor in chief of The New Palgrave Dictionary Online. He specializes in macroeconomics, international political economy, and the history of economic ideas.
Marco Veronese Passarella is Lecturer in the Economics Division at the Leeds University Business School, UK. He has been working on monetary economics, macroeconomics, and history of economic thought, from Marxian and Post Keynesian perspectives.
Benjamin Wilhelm is Research Associate at the Institute for Sociology at the University of Gießen, Germany. His main research interests are shadow banking, financial regulation, and economic sociology.
Mary V. Wrenn is the Joan Robinson Research Fellow in Heterodox Economics at Girton College, University of Cambridge, UK. Mary’s research interests include locating ontological concepts such as agency, identity, and fear within the historical framework of neoliberalism.