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Migrations and Boundary Work: Harvard, Radical Economists, and the Committee on Political Discrimination


Tiago Mata


University of Cambridge - Department of History & Philosophy of Science

January 7, 2009

Science in Context, Vol. 22, No. 1, pp 115-143, March 2009

Abstract:     
In the late 1960s, in the midst of campus unrest, a group of young economists calling themselves "radicals" challenged the boundaries of economics. In the radicals' cultural cartography, economic science and politics were represented as overlapping. These claims were scandalous because they were voiced from Harvard University, drawing on its authority. With radicals' claims the subject of increasing media attention, the economics mainstream sought to re-assert the longstanding cultural map of economic science, where objectivity and advocacy were distinguishable. The resolution of the contest of credibility came with a string of cases of dismissals and denial of tenure for radicals. The American Economic Association's investigations of these cases, imposing the conventional cultural map, concluded that personnel decisions had not been politically motivated. Radicals were forced to migrate from the elite institutions from which they had emerged to less prestigious ones. "Place" became a marker of their marginalization within the profession.

JEL Classification: A14, B20, B24

Accepted Paper Series


Date posted: January 27, 2009 ; Last revised: February 11, 2009

Suggested Citation

Mata, Tiago , Migrations and Boundary Work: Harvard, Radical Economists, and the Committee on Political Discrimination (January 7, 2009). Science in Context, Vol. 22, No. 1, pp 115-143, March 2009. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1333519

Contact Information

Tiago Mata (Contact Author)
University of Cambridge - Department of History & Philosophy of Science ( email )
Cambridge, CB2 1TN
United Kingdom
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