In this Issue
- Volume 80, Number 3, Fall 2013
- Issue
- Austerity Economics Failed Economics but Persistent Policy
- Guest Editors: Teresa Ghilarducci and Richard McGahey
Social Research has its origins in the New School’s historic effort to provide intellectuals safe haven as the Nazis began to threaten Jewish scholars prior to the onset of WWII. This group of rescued scholars, known as the University in Exile, launched Social Research: An International Quarterly of the Political and Social Sciences in 1934 on the core conviction that every true university must have its own distinct public voice. Today, that profound voice resonates in each issue, as multidisciplinary scholars, writers, and experts take on contentious social issues, countries in transition, and phenomena that seem ripe for exploration. Periodic special issues are devoted to the proceedings of the journal’s renowned conferences at the New School.
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Volume 80, Number 3, Fall 2013Table of Contents
- Editor’s Introduction
- pp. xxi-xxii
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sor.2013.0065
- John Hollander, 1929–2013
- pp. xxiii-xxiv
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sor.2013.0071
- Guest Editors’ Introduction
- pp. xxv-xxix
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sor.2013.0041
Part I: The Source and Power of Austerity's Visision
Part II: Political Economy
Part III: Escaping Austerity Economics: Alternative Analyses
Part IV: Moving Forward and Away from Austerity
- Austerity and Democracy
- pp. 917-928
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sor.2013.0067
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