Kvangraven, Ingrid Harvold and Kesar, Surbhi
(2021)
Standing in the way of rigor? economics’ meeting with the decolonizing agenda.
Working Paper.
The New School, New York.
Abstract
This paper critically engages with various aspects of the decolonization movement in
economics and its implications for the discipline. We operationalize the insights from this
engagement using a survey of 498 economists that explores how faculty across different
kinds of departments, disciplines, geographies, and identities perceive the problems of
economics teaching, how they think economics pedagogy should be reformed, if at all, and
how they relate to decolonial critiques of economics pedagogy. Based on the survey findings,
we conclude that the mainstream of the field’s emphasis on technical training and rigor,
within a narrow theoretical and methodological framework, likely stands in the way of the
very possibility for decolonizing economics, given its strong contrast to key ideas associated
with the decolonization agenda, such as positionality, centering power relations, exposing
underlying politics of defining theoretical categories, and unpacking the politics of
knowledge production. Nonetheless, the survey responses clearly chart out the challenges that
the field faces in terms of decolonizing pedagogy, which is a first step towards debate and
change.
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