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Thursday, January 3, 2019

Developing Revolt at the AEA?

We have previously posted about developments related to sexual harassment at the American Economic Association (AEA) which is having its annual meeting this weekend. But it appears there is also an incipient revolt of a more general nature:

As thousands of economists gather this week for the annual meeting of the American Economic Association, the field and the association are facing criticism on a number of fronts.
One scholar's posts on Twitter -- receiving praise from others on social media -- note that the association's leaders, its top journals and a key prize increasingly appear tied to a very small number of departments at elite universities, in his view potentially excluding good people and good ideas from the attention they deserve. While many disciplines have particularly influential departments, this critique suggests that economics may be in a class by itself. The criticism also comes as hundreds of graduate students have issued a public call for the field, its departments and the association to adopt codes of conduct to prevent abusive treatment of graduate students and young scholars.
The tweets about the profession came from Jacob L. Vigdor, an economist who is a professor of public policy at the University of Washington...
Full story from Inside Higher Ed at:

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