EJPE is a peer-reviewed bi-annual academic journal supported by the Erasmus Institute for Philosophy and Economics at the Erasmus School of Philosophy, Erasmus University Rotterdam. EJPE publishes research on the methodology, history, ethics, and interdisciplinary relations of economics, and welcomes contributions from all scholars with an interest in any of its research domains. EJPE is an Open Access Journal: all the content is permanently available online without subscription or payment.
The latest issue of the Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics (EJPE) is now available online at http://ejpe.org/. Please see below for an overview of the issue and visit our website for more!
Overview EJPE Winter Issue (Vol.16/No.2): Article Symposium on Joseph Heath's ‘Anodyne Privatization’
Articles
- The Partially Impartial Spectator by Sveinung Sundfør Sivertsen
Article Symposium on Joseph Heath's ‘Anodyne Privatization’
- Anodyne Privatization by Joseph Heath
- Privatization, Structural Dependence, and the Problem of Legitimacy by Chiara Cordelli
- Repoliticizing Privatization by Savriël Dillingh
- Elements for a Normative Theory of Privatization by Rutger Claassen
- Public Provision in Democratic Societies by Martin O’Neill
Interviews
- Ethics from the Outside Looking In An Interview with Roger Crisp by Benjamin Mullins
- What Public Policy Can Be An Interview with Matthew Adler by Måns Abrahamson and Akshath Jitendranath
Book reviews:
- Review of Olúfemi O Táíwò’s Reconsidering Reparations by Josep Recasens
- Review of Josiah Ober’s The Greeks and the Rational: The Discovery of Practical Reason by Bob van Velthoven
- Review of Thomas Piketty’s A Brief History of Equality by Ross Emmett
- Review of André et al.’s From Evolutionary Biology to Economics and Back: Parallels and Crossings between Economics and Evolution by Ahmed Al-Juhany
- Review of Mark Fabian’s A Theory of Subjective Wellbeing by Willem van der Deijl
- Review of Thomas Kelly’s Bias: A Philosophical Studyby Lennart Ackermans
PhD thesis Summaries:
- The Singular Plurality of Social Social Goods: Ontology and Collective Dilemmas by Marco Emilio
- Defining Exploitation by Ulysse Lojkine
- Sharing in Common: A Republican Defence of Group Ownership by Yara Al Salman