Jack Amariglio is Professor of Economics at Merrimack College, USA, and former editor of the journal Rethinking Marxism. He is co-author (with David F. Ruccio) of Postmodern Moments in Modern Economics and co-editor (with Joseph Childers and Stephen Cullenberg) of Sublime Economy: On the Intersection of Art and Economics.
Erdogan Bakir is Associate Professor of Economics at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, PA, USA. His research has appeared in the Review of Radical Political Economics, Journal of Economic Issues and Science & Society: A Journal of Marxist Thought and Analysis.
Fabian Balardini is Associate Professor of Economics at the Borough of Manhattan Community College in New York City, USA. He is the author of Oil Price Cycles: A Theoretical and Empirical Investigation Using Marx ’ s Theory of Value, and his research has appeared in Socialism and Democracy and Razon y Revolucion.
Drucilla K. Barker is Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Women ’ s & Gender Studies Program at the University of South Carolina, USA. She is a radical, feminist economist whose research interests are globalization, feminist political economy, and economic anthropology. Her work ranges from examinations of the roles of gender, race and class in social valuations of labor, especially affective labor, to feminist accounts of the financial crises that characterize late global capitalism.
Suzanne Bergeron is Professor of Women’s Studies and Social Sciences and Director of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan–Dearborn, USA. In the 1980s, she was an undergraduate student of Stephen Resnick ’ s, whose keen interest in the topic of theMarxian political economy of the household inspired her to pursue graduate study on the topic. She has since published widely on the topic of gender, development and social reproduction.
Rajesh Bhattacharya is Associate Professor in the Public Policy and Management Group at Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, India. He has also taught at South Asian University, University of Calcutta and Presidency University. He obtained his Ph.D. in Economics from University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His research areas include Marxian economic theory, political economy of development and Indian economic history.
David M. Brennan is Associate Professor of Economics at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, PA, USA. His research has appeared in the Cambridge Journal of Economics, the Review of Radical Political Economics, Feminist Economics and Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture & Society, among other publications.
Dick Bryan is Emeritus Professor of Political Economy at the University of Sydney, Australia. He currently works on the social significance of financial derivatives and their implications for theories of value.
Theodore Burczak is Professor of Economics at Denison University, USA. He is author of Socialism after Hayek (2006) and several other articles advancing progressive critiques of Hayek and Austrian economics.
Antonio Callari is the Sigmund M. And Mary B. Hyman Professor of Economics at Franklin and Marshall College, in Lancaster, PA, USA. His work has been on Marxian theory and on intellectual history.
Al Campbell is Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Utah, USA. His research work includes the functioning of contemporary capitalism, and the theory and practical experiments of alternative human-centered political economic systems.
Guglielmo Carchedi has worked as a social affairs officer at the UN in New York and as a professor at the University of Amsterdam up to his retirement. He is now Associate Professor at York University, Toronto, Canada. He is the author of numerous books and articles on epistemology, sociology and political economy.
Anjan Chakrabarti is Professor of Economics, University of Calcutta, India. His recent book is The Indian Economy in Transition: Globalization, Capitalism and Development (with Anup Dhar and Byasdeb Dasgupta). He is the recipient of the Dr V K RV Rao Prize in Social Science Research in Economics for the year 2008.
Brett Clark is Associate Professor of Sociology and Sustainability Studies at the University of Utah, USA. He is the coauthor of four books, including The Tragedy of the Commodity, The Ecological Rift, The Science and Humanism of Stephen Jay Gould, and Critique of Intelligent Design.
Hans G. Despain is Professor of Economics at Nichols College in Dudley, Massachusetts, USA. Professor Despain is the Chair of the Economics Department and the Chair of Nichols College Honors Program. His primary areas of research include Marxian political economy and the political economy of education.
Anup Dhar is Associate Professor, School of Human Studies and Director of the Centre for Development Practice, Ambedkar University, Delhi, India. His recently published books include Dislocation and Resettlement in Development: From Third Word to World of the Third (co-authored with Anjan Chakrabarti) from Routledge and World of the Third and Global Capitalism (co-authored with Anjan Chakrabarti and Stephen Cullenberg).
Paulo L. dos Santos is Assistant Professor of Economics at the New School for Social Research in New York City, USA. His research includes work on the social and macroeconomic content of contemporary financial practices, finance and development, income distribution, mathematical methods in economic analysis, and the development statisticalmechanical approaches to the analysis of economic systems. His articles have appeared in Economic Letters, Journal of Post-Keynesian Economics, Metroeconomica, and Historical Materialism, among other journals.
Esra Erdem is Professor for Social Economics at Alice Salomon University Berlin, Germany. Her research on the political economy of migration and urban postcapitalist practices has appeared in Rethinking Marxism, German Politics and Society, Revista de Economia Mundial and Acta Geographica, among other publications.
Duncan K. Foley is Leo Model Professor of Economics at the New School for Social Research in New York City, and an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute, USA. He received the PhD in Economics from Yale University, and has taught at M.I.T., Stanford, and Barnard College of Columbia University. His interests in economics center on economic theory, political economy, the history of economics, mathematical modeling, and the foundations of statistical reasoning. Recent research includes work on modeling the mammalian brain clock, the economics of global warming, economics and thermodynamics, Marxian value theory, social coordination problems, and Bayesian approaches to theory choice.
Satyananda Gabriel is Professor of Economics and Finance at Mt. Holyoke College, USA. He is former director of education for the Urban League of Greater Portland, Oregon and former director of the Financial Services Academy in Portland, Oregon. As academic coordinator of the National Rural Fellows and Rural Development Leadership Network, he taught courses in alternative economic enterprises, including analysis of productive selfemployment and collective enterprises. He supervised the Volunteers in Probation Program for Multnomah County (Oregon) Adult Corrections. He has also served as consultant for UNDP in Central America and on various Native American reservations in the U.S.
David Kristjanson-Gural is Professor of Economics and Senior Fellow of the Social Justice College at Bucknell University, USA. His research explores the role of demand in Marxian theories of value and price, Marx ’ s methodology and the ethical and practical dimensions of worker self-directed enterprises, particularly as a means of solving poverty. His published work appears in Rethinking Marxism, Research in Political Economy, Historical Materialism and The International Journal for Pluralism in Economics Education.
Andrew Kliman is a professor emeritus of economics at Pace University, New York, USA. He is the author of two books, Reclaiming Marx’s “Capital” and The Failure of Capitalist Production, co-editor (with Nick Potts) of Is Marx’s Theory of Profit Right?, and editor of Lexington Books ’ series, Heterodox Studies in the Critique of Political Economy. His research on value theory, economic crisis theory, and other topics has appeared in journals such the Cambridge Journal of Economics, the American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Capital and Class, and Marxism 21, and in popular media.
Costas Lapavitsas is Professor of Economics at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, UK. He has published widely and his most recent books include Profiting without Producing (2013) and Against the Troika (2015) with Heiner Flassbeck.
Stefano B. Longo is Associate Professor of Sociology at North Carolina State University, USA. He is the coauthor of The Tragedy of theCommodity:Oceans, Fisheries, and Aquaculture.
Terrence McDonough was Professor of Economics at National University of Ireland, Galway, until his recent retirement. He is also Honorary Professor of Political Economy at the University of Sydney, Australia. He has published in the areas of capitalist stages, globalization, environment, and Irish and American economy and history. He maintains an active interest in community and labor economics education.
Richard McIntyre is Professor of Economics and Political Science and chair of the economics department at the University of Rhode Island, USA. He is the author of Are Worker Rights Human Rights? (2008) and many academic and popular articles. He is the general editor of the New Political Economy book series published by Routledge.
Fred Moseley is Professor Emeritus of Economics atMount Holyoke College,Massachusetts, USA. He has taught courses in Marxian Economics, History of Economic Thought, U.S. Economic History, and Macroeconomics. He has published numerous articles on Marx’s logical method, especially with respect to the transformation problem, and his new book Money and Totality: A Macro-Monetary Interpretation of Marx’s Logic in Capital and the End of the ‘Transformation Problem ’ was published in October 2015.
Catherine P. Mulder is an associate professor of economics and the program director at John Jay College–CUNY, USA. She has published two books, Unions and Class Transformation: The Case of the Broadway Musicians and Transcending Capitalism through Cooperative Practices. She has also published articles in journals, most recently in Rethinking Marxism. Cathy is also the current president of the Association for Economic and Social Analysis.
Bruce Norton is Associate Professor and Economics Program Coordinator at San Antonio College in San Antonio, TX, USA. He has published articles in journals including History and Theory, History of Political Economy, Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture & Society, the Review of Radical Political Economics, Social Concept, and the Cambridge Journal of Economics.
Erik K. Olsen is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri–Kansas City and Research Fellow at the Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations, USA. He holds a doctorate from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, a B.S. from Northeastern University, and has published widely with contributions in several fields of economics. Currently he is engaged in research on the effect of group or cooperative ownership and participatory management on firm structure, performance and survival.
Michael Rafferty is Associate Professor of International Business at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. He currently works on the social significance of financial derivatives, especially in relation to offshore financial centers and the valuation of intangible assets.
Elizabeth A. Ramey is an Associate Professor of Economics at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, NY, USA. Her research interests include gender and economics as well as the political economy of food and agriculture. She recently completed a book: Class, Gender and the American Family Farm in the Twentieth Century.
Bruce Roberts is formerly Professor of Economics at the University of Southern Maine, USA. His articles on Marx and value have appeared in numerous journals and books.
David F. Ruccio is Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame, USA, and former editor (from 1997 to 2009) of the journal Rethinking Marxism. His books include Development and Globalization: A Marxian Class Analysis, Economic Representations: Both Academic and Everyday, Postmodern Moments in Modern Economics, Postmodernism, Economics, and Knowledge, and Postmodern Materialism and the Future of Marxist Theory.
Alfredo Saad-Filho is Professor of Political Economy at SOAS, University of London, UK, and was a senior economic affairs officer at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. He has published extensively on the political economy of development, industrial policy, neoliberalism, democracy, alternative economic policies, Latin American political and economic development, inflation and stabilisation, and the labour theory of value and its applications.
Maliha Safri is Associate Professor and Chair of the Economics Department at Drew University, USA. Her research has appeared in Signs, Middle East Journal, Organization, Rethinking Marxism, Journal of Design Strategies, and edited book collections such as the recent Making Other Worlds Possible: Performing Diverse Economies. She won a collaborative National Science Foundation grant for research on noncapitalist economies in NYC, and is currently at work on that project.
Claudio Sardoni is Professor of Economics at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. After graduating in Statistics in Rome, in 1982 he obtained his PhD in economics at the University of Adelaide, under the supervision of Geoff Harcourt. Sardoni ’ s main area of research is macroeconomics and monetary theory, with particular attention to the Keynesian and Post Keynesian traditions and their relationship with the Classical and Marxian approaches. On these topics he has published many articles, chapters in books and two books.
Sean Sayers is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Kent, UK, and Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Peking University, China. He has written extensively on many areas of philosophy from a Hegelian-Marxist perspective. His books include Marx and Alienation: Essays on Hegelian Themes (2011), Plato ’ s Republic: An Introduction (1999), Marxism and Human Nature (1998), Reality and Reason: Dialectic and the Theory of Knowledge (1985), and Hegel, Marx and Dialectic: A debate (with Richard Norman, 1980). He was one of the founders of Radical Philosophy (1972–), and he is the founder and Editor in Chief of the online Marx and Philosophy Review of Books (2010–).
Ian J. Seda-Irizarry is Assistant Professor in the Economics Department at John Jay College, City University of New York, USA. He obtained his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His research interests include Marxian economic theory, economic history, and the political economy of development in Puerto Rico.
Andrew B. Trigg is Senior Lecturer in Economics at The Open University, UK. He has published widely in journals and edited volumes; his 2006 monograph, Marxian Reproduction Schema: Money and Aggregate Demand in a Capitalist Economy, is published by Routledge.
Roberto Veneziani holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is Reader at the School of Economics and Finance, Queen Mary University of London, UK. His research interests include Marxian economics, egalitarian principles, distribution of resources between generations, sustainable development, and normative principles in economics. He is also interested in the history of economic thought and in political economy from a mathematical perspective.
Richard D. Wolff is Professor of Economics Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and Visiting Professor at The New School University, New York, USA. His recent work is posted at rdwolff.com and democracyatwork.info. His most latest book (2016) is Capitalism ’ s Crisis Deepens.