Fields or Schools of Heterodox Economics
- American Institutionalist School
- Austrian economics # (partly within, and partly outside mainstream economics)
- Binary Economics
- Bioeconomics
- Complexity economics
- Ecological economics §
- Evolutionary economics # §(partly within mainstream economics)
- Feminist economics # §
- Georgism
- Green Economics
- Gesellian economics
- Institutional economics # §
- Islamic economics
- Marxian economics #
- Mutualism
- Neuroeconomics
- Participatory economics
- Post-Keynesian economics,§ including Modern Monetary Theory and Circuitism
- Post scarcity
- Socialist economics #
- Social economics (partially heterodox usage)
- Supply-side economics
- Sraffian economics #
- Technocracy (Energy Accounting)
- Thermoeconomics
- Mouvement Anti-Utilitariste dans les Sciences Sociales
# Listed in Journal of Economic Literature codes scrolled to at JEL: B5 - Current Heterodox Approaches.
§ Listed in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition, v. 8, Appendix IV, p. 856, searchable by clicking (the JEL classification codes JEL:) radio button B5, B52, or B59, then the Search button (or Update Search Results button) at http://www.dictionaryofeconomics.com/search_results?edition=all&field=content&q=&topicid=B5.
Some schools in the social sciences aim to promote certain perspectives: classical and modern political economy; economic sociology and anthropology; gender and racial issues in economics; and so on.
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