女性主义思想与经济学;或者说,西哥特人知道什么?

Feminist thought and economics; or, what do the Visigoths know?

American Economic Review · 1994
被引 59
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

探讨女性主义思想如何挑战主流经济学的客观性和严谨性,分析跨学科方法对经济学的价值,并回应关于相对主义和理论评判的担忧。

Abstract

Many economists have expressed concern that approaches borrowed from the humanities or from the softer social sciences will detract from the rigor and objectivity of economic science and give voice to those without proper training-and in so doing reduce the discipline to a science no more defensible than alchemy. Since much feminist thought in economics draws heavily from intellectual traditions alien to mainstream economists (e.g. critical interpretive theory, cultural studies, and feminist theory), some economists may wonder what such modes of inquiry have to offer economics.' Further, they may ask, are there no pitfalls in modes of inquiry not disciplined by accepted economic methodologies? In short, what do those Visigoths know? My purpose is to address issues in method and theory underlying recent feminist work in economics, and to explain how economics may gain by opening its disciplinary gates. From the perspective of traditional mainstream practice in economics, two prominent issues emerge in considering modes of inquiry and theory drawn from other disciplines. The first has to do with what counts as theory and the role of critique in theorizing. The second has to do with the need to sort out better theories from worse and the perceived dangers of rampant relativism. I will address these in turn.

女性主义经济学经济学方法论跨学科理论批判诠释理论