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Introducing race and gender into economics /

"Introducing race and gender into economics is the first book to provide a detailed model of how issues of race and gender can be integrated into the teaching of an introductory economics course. The book's innovative structure mirrors a typical introductory course and suggests alternative...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Bartlett, Robin L. (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London ; New York : Routledge, 1997.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • pt. I. Integrating race and gender: a framework. 1. Reconstructing Economics 190 R & G: Introductory Economics course from a race and gender perspective / Robin L. Bartlett
  • pt. II. Integrating race and gender topics into introductory microeconomics. 2. Protective labor legislation and women's employment / Pamela J. Nickless and James D. Whitney. 3. Market segmentation: the role of race in housing markets / Rosemary T. Cunningham. 4. Gender and race and the decision to go to college / Louise Laurence and Robert L. Moore. 5. The labor supply decision
  • differences between genders and races / Margaret Lewis and Janice Peterson. 6. The economics of affirmative action / Robert L. Moore and James D. Whitney. 7. Risk analysis: do current methods account for diversity? / Kathy Parkison
  • pt. III. Integrating race and gender topics into introductory macroeconomics. 8. Race and gender in a basic labor force model / Margaret A. Ray.
  • 9. General vs. selective credit controls: the Asset Required Reserve Proposal / William M. Kempey. 10. A critique of national accounting / Rachel A. Nugent. 11. A disaggregated CPI: the differential effects of inflation / Irene Powell and Jane Rossetti. 12. An active learning exercise for studying the differential effects of inflation / Sherryl Davis Kasper
  • pt. IV. Additional considerations in integrating race and gender into Economics 190 R & G. 13. Gender and the study of economics: a feminist critique / Marianne A. Ferber. 14. Integrating race and gender topics into introductory microeconomics courses / Robert Cherry. 15. Thoughts on teaching Asian-American undergraduates / Akira Motomura. 16. Some thoughts on teaching predominantly affective-oriented groups / Vernon J. Dixon. 17. Race, gender, and economic data / Carolyn Shaw Bell.