
Contents
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I. Introduction and Overview I. Introduction and Overview
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II. Preliminary Distinctions II. Preliminary Distinctions
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A. Interface and Integration Scholarship A. Interface and Integration Scholarship
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B. The Broad Substance of Economics B. The Broad Substance of Economics
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C. The Real Domain of Economics C. The Real Domain of Economics
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III. The Growing Fullness of Faith‒Economics Interfaces III. The Growing Fullness of Faith‒Economics Interfaces
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A. Economics of Religion A. Economics of Religion
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B. Other Interfaces B. Other Interfaces
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1. “Positional” and Conflict Economics 1. “Positional” and Conflict Economics
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2. Objectives, Incentives, Mechanism Design, Law-and-Economics 2. Objectives, Incentives, Mechanism Design, Law-and-Economics
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IV. The Quest for Integration IV. The Quest for Integration
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A. Unnoticed Attempts A. Unnoticed Attempts
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B. Telescopic Interface-Integration Bridges B. Telescopic Interface-Integration Bridges
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C. The “New” Social Economics C. The “New” Social Economics
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D. Identity Economics D. Identity Economics
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E. Summing Up Integration Efforts, and Integration Bridges A-Building E. Summing Up Integration Efforts, and Integration Bridges A-Building
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V. Why So Elusive the Quest for Creative Integration in Economics? V. Why So Elusive the Quest for Creative Integration in Economics?
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VI. Conclusion, Commendation, and Forecast VI. Conclusion, Commendation, and Forecast
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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Appendix Orientation and Organization: What This Chapter Is Not About Appendix Orientation and Organization: What This Chapter Is Not About
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Notes Notes
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References References
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16 Interface and Integration in Christian Economics
Get accessJ. David Richardson is Professor of Economics and International Relations in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University and Senior Fellow Emeritus at Peterson Institute for International Economics.
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Published:03 March 2014
Cite
Abstract
The sad and lonely profile of late twentieth-century Christian scholarship in economics has enjoyed a refreshing makeover in the past two decades. Encouraging new research on the overlapping interface of faith and discipline has attained critical mass and fruitful momentum. This interface includes contributions under the umbrella term “economics of religion,” and somewhat-less-often cited contributions to “positional” and conflict economics, and to institutional mechanism design in law and economics. Beyond interface lies scholarly “integration of faith and discipline” that alters and cross-leavens the foundational frames for analysis in both economics and careful Christian thinking about divine and human nature and society. Such integrative scholarship is still in its infancy. But some of it—in the ethical underpinnings of national economic growth and flourishing, and in the economics of identity and social identification—is attracting noteworthy scholarly attention, as measured by the citation counts used recurrently in this survey.
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