Michele Alacevich is professor of history of economic thought and economic history at the University of Bologna. He specializes in the history of twentieth-century development institutions and ideas, the history of the social sciences, and international and global economic history. He is the author of Albert O. Hirschman: An Intellectual Biography (Columbia University Press, 2021), Inequality: A Short History (with Anna Soci; Brookings Institution Press, 2018), The Political Economy of the World Bank: The Early Years (Stanford University Press, 2009), and articles in Past and Present, the Journal of Global History, History of Political Economy, and the Journal of the History of Economic Thought. With Mauro Boianovsky, he was the editor of the 2018 HOPE supplement, The Political Economy of Development Economics: A Historical Perspective.
François Allisson is senior lecturer at the Centre Walras Pareto, University of Lausanne, Switzerland. His research interests are the intellectual history of capitalism and the history of Russian, Ukrainian, and Soviet economic thought. He is the author of Value and Prices in Russian Economic Thought and, with Nicolas Brisset, of Aux origines du capitalisme: Robert Brenner et le marxisme politique.
Alan Bollard is a professor in the School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington. His research interests are economic history and trade policy, and he is author of several books published by Oxford University Press on economists in wartime. He has been a senior New Zealand public servant.
Marcel Boumans is professor of history of economics at Utrecht University. His main research focus is on understanding empirical research practices in the social sciences from a combined historical and philosophical perspective. He is particularly interested in the practices of measurement and modeling and the role of mathematics in the social sciences. The first step in these practices is to make sense of the available data. Visualizations play an important role in this. His current research project focuses on how phenomena are shaped. The most recent output of this project is the 2021 HOPE supplement, edited with Jeff Biddle, titled Exploring the History of Statistical Inference in Economics.
Adriana Calcagno is a postdoctoral researcher at CNRS and CIRED, working within the ERC-funded project “Energy Transitions in the History of Economic Thought” (ETRANHET). She is also an affiliate researcher at PHARE, University of Paris 1. Her research interests are the history of economics, development theories, and political economy. Her work has been published in the Journal of the History of Economic Thought.
Katia Caldari is associate professor of economics at the University of Padova, Department of Political Science, Law, and International Studies (SPGI). Her main interests focus particularly on the contributions of Alfred Marshall, François Perroux, Robert Marjolin, and Pierre Massé; French economic planning; growth and sustainable development; financial and economic crises; solidarity economics; and economic methodology. Her work has appeared in the Cambridge Journal of Economics, the European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, the Journal of the History of Economic Thought, the Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, and Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, among others.
Hsiang-Ke Chao is a professor of economics and director of the Center for Economic Research on Globalization at National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan. He has also been a visiting scholar at Duke University, the London School of Economics, the University of California at Davis, and Stanford University. His research interests are primarily focused on the history and philosophy of model-based reasoning and knowledge transfer in the development of science, as well as the state-building process of Taiwan. He recently served as a guest editor for the special issue “Symposium on Mary Morgan: Curiosity, Imagination, and Surprise” of Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology (with Marcel Boumans) and for the special issue “Thinking and Acting with Diagrams” of East Asian Science, Technology, and Society (with Harro Maas).
Muriel Dal Pont Legrand is professor of economics at the Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS GREDEG. She specializes in interwar and postwar history of macroeconomics, with a particular interest in the history of business cycles and growth theories, macroeconomics and complex systems, monetary institutions and policies, and the development of economic expertise in France after World War II. Since 2014, she has been coeditor of the European Journal of the History of Economic Thought and since 2019 has been coeditor of Springer's Studies in the History of Economic Thought series. Her work has appeared in the European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, the Journal of the History of Economic Thought, the Journal of Economic Perspectives, the Revue d’économie politique, and Oeconomia, among others.
Robert W. Dimand is a professor of economics at Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, and a visiting professor at Yale University. He is the author of The Origins of the Keynesian Revolution (1988), James Tobin (2014), and Irving Fisher (2019), and coauthor of A History of Game Theory, vol. 1 (with Mary Ann Dimand, 1996). He is the editor or coeditor of a dozen books, including The Routledge Handbook of the History of Women's Economic Thought (with Kirsten Madden, 2018) and The Elgar Companion to John Maynard Keynes (with Harald Hagemann, 2019), and he has published more than 120 journal articles.
Pedro Garcia Duarte is an associate professor at INSPER, Brazil, and researches the technical transformations of economics in the twentieth century, particularly after World War II, with a special interest in the history of macroeconomics. He has published several articles on this topic in leading journals in the history of economics and in economics, and he coedited Microfoundations Reconsidered: The Relationship of Micro and Macroeconomics in Historical Perspective (2012) and the 2020 HOPE supplement, Economics and Engineering: Institutions, Practices, and Cultures. He was a guest editor, with Marcel Boumans, of the symposium titled “The History of Macroeconometric Modeling,” published in 2019 in HOPE. He has been coeditor of the Journal of the History of Economic Thought since 2018 and has been an organizer of the History of Recent Economics Conference (HISRECO).
Ariane Dupont-Kieffer, PhD, is vice president in charge of sustainability and social responsibility at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. She is an economics professor at the Sorbonne School of Economics and develops her research at PHARE. Her research focuses on the links between economic theory, modeling, and policymaking and policy assessment. She has conducted extensive research in the area of epistemology and history of economic thought and focuses specifically on the history of econometrics and macroeconomics and the relationship between measurement issues, statistical analysis, and policymaking. After ten years of experience investigating theoretical and methodological issues at Paris 1, she worked for another ten years at IFSTTAR (formerly INRETS) to contribute to the assessment of road externalities. Within the perspective of sustainable transportation, she has developed the understanding of determinants of mobility with a focus on gender and equity issues to be related to efficiency. An important part of her work is dedicated to enhancing international comparison of data on gender and equity in mobility and to translating research findings into policy implementation.
Harald Hagemann is professor emeritus of economics at the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart; a life member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge; and honorary past president of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought. He is author and editor of numerous books and articles on the history of modern macroeconomics, the employment consequences of new technologies, and the emigration of economists from Nazi Germany. Recent publications include The Elgar Companion to John Maynard Keynes (edited with R. W. Dimand, 2019) and Russian and Western Economic Thought: Mutual Influences and Transfer of Ideas (edited with V. Avtonomov; Springer 2022).
Hsiao-ting Lin is a research fellow and curator of modern China and Taiwan at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. His research interests include the history of pre-1949 China, of post-1949 Taiwan, and of the relationship between China, Taiwan, and the United States during the Cold War. He is the author of Accidental State: Chiang Kai-shek, the United States, and the Making of Taiwan (Harvard University Press, 2016); Taiwan, the United States, and the Hidden History of the Cold War in Asia: Divided Allies (Routledge, 2022); and over a hundred journal articles, book chapters, and reviews.
Tsvetelina Marinova is an associate professor of economics at the New Bulgarian University, Bulgaria, and an associate researcher at the LEFMI, University of Picardie Jules Verne, France. Her research interests are in the fields of history of economic thought, economic history, social and solidarity economy, and European economic and monetary integration. In 2021, she published Economie sociale et solidaire dans les pays des Balkans: Bulgarie, Roumanie, Serbie; Quels enseignements? (Paris: L'Harmattan). Her work has appeared in the Revue d'histoire de la pensée économique, the History of Economic Thought and Policy, and the Journal of European Economic History.
Nikolay Nenovsky is a professor of economics at the LEFMI, University of Picardie Jules Verne, France, and an affiliated researcher at the University of National and World Economy, Sofia, and at the Department of Theoretical Economics, SU, HSE, Moscow. He is a member of the Bulgarian National Bank Governing Council. His research is in the fields of the theory and history of money, economic thought, and international economics, mainly Eastern Europe and Russia, and he has published in the leading journals in these fields. In 2022, together with Eric Magnin, he edited Diversity of Capitalism in Central and Eastern Europe: Dependent Economies and Monetary Regimes (Palgrave Macmillan).
Antonella Rancan is professor of economics at the University of Molise (Italy). Her main research interests are in the history of postwar macroeconomics and macroeconometric modeling within academia and policymaking institutions, examining the practice of economics and economists’ interactions across different contexts. Her research has appeared in leading journals in the history of economic thought and economics. She is the author of Franco Modigliani and Keynesian Economics (Routledge, 2020) and, with Francesco Sergi, Modelling Europe: A History of Multi-country Models (Palgrave, 2024).
Sylvie Rivot is a professor at the University of Haute-Alsace (Mulhouse-France), where she is vice president of research and doctoral studies, and she belongs to the lab BETA (Bureau d'Economie Théorique et Appliquée). Her main research interests are the history of macroeconomics, with a particular interest in Keynes and Friedman. She has published Where to Draw the Line? Keynes and Friedman on Laissez-Faire and Planning (Routledge, 2013). More recently, she has published “Lucas and Friedman: The Challenges of Rational-Expectations Based Monetary Cycles for Adaptive-Expectations Based Monetary Long Trends” (Review of Political Economy, 2023), “Peter Howitt's Keynesian Recovery and Keynes: An Assessment” (European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2024), and “The Cowles Commission and the Emerging Chicago School: Conflicting Economic Methodologies at the University of Chicago in the Late 1940s and Early 1950s” (with R. W. Dimand; History of Economic Ideas, 2024).