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Harvard Economics Students Walk Out In Protest Over ‘biased’ Course.

Posted by praxispamphlet on November 4, 2011
Posted in: Protests. Tagged: Economics, Greg Mankiw, Harvard, Protest. Leave a Comment

On Wednesday afternoon more than 70 Harvard students walked out of their Economics 10 class, an introductory course taught by Greg Mankiw, former advisor of the Bush administration. Frustrated at what they express is an overly biased conservative syllabus in the University’s most sought after course, these Harvard students wrote an open letter to their lecture justifying their action.

Wednesday November 2, 2011

Dear Professor Mankiw—

Today, we are walking out of your class, Economics 10, in order to express our discontent with the bias inherent in this introductory economics course. We are deeply concerned about the way that this bias affects students, the University, and our greater society.

As Harvard undergraduates, we enrolled in Economics 10 hoping to gain a broad and introductory foundation of economic theory that would assist us in our various intellectual pursuits and diverse disciplines, which range from Economics, to Government, to Environmental Sciences and Public Policy, and beyond. Instead, we found a course that espouses a specific—and limited—view of economics that we believe perpetuates problematic and inefficient systems of economic inequality in our society today.

A legitimate academic study of economics must include a critical discussion of both the benefits and flaws of different economic simplifying models. As your class does not include primary sources and rarely features articles from academic journals, we have very little access to alternative approaches to economics. There is no justification for presenting Adam Smith’s economic theories as more fundamental or basic than, for example, Keynesian theory.

Care in presenting an unbiased perspective on economics is particularly important for an introductory course of 700 students that nominally provides a sound foundation for further study in economics. Many Harvard students do not have the ability to opt out of Economics 10. This class is required for Economics and Environmental Science and Public Policy concentrators, while Social Studies concentrators must take an introductory economics course—and the only other eligible class, Professor Steven Margolin’s class Critical Perspectives on Economics, is only offered every other year (and not this year).  Many other students simply desire an analytic understanding of economics as part of a quality liberal arts education. Furthermore, Economics 10 makes it difficult for subsequent economics courses to teach effectively as it offers only one heavily skewed perspective rather than a solid grounding on which other courses can expand. Students should not be expected to avoid this class—or the whole discipline of economics—as a method of expressing discontent.

Harvard graduates play major roles in the financial institutions and in shaping public policy around the world. If Harvard fails to equip its students with a broad and critical understanding of economics, their actions are likely to harm the global financial system. The last five years of economic turmoil have been proof enough of this.

We are walking out today to join a Boston-wide march protesting the corporatization of higher education as part of the global Occupy movement. Since the biased nature of Economics 10 contributes to and symbolizes the increasing economic inequality in America, we are walking out of your class today both to protest your inadequate discussion of basic economic theory and to lend our support to a movement that is changing American discourse on economic injustice. Professor Mankiw, we ask that you take our concerns and our walk-out seriously.

Sincerely,

Concerned students of Economics 10

The original link to this letter can be found at http://hpronline.org/campus/an-open-letter-to-greg-mankiw/?mid=51

David Malone: Debt or Democracy

Posted by praxispamphlet on November 3, 2011
Posted in: Events. Tagged: David Malone, Irish Infographic Project, NCAD. Leave a Comment

The Praxis & Pedagogy group at GradCAM and the Irish Debt Infographic project recently hosted a seminar with author and filmaker David Malone. In 2008 Malone began commenting on the financial pages of the Guardian newspaper’s website about the credit crunch and the ensuing financial crisis under the pseudonym Golem XIV, the name of a military supercomputer in a novel of the same name by the Polish science fiction writer Stanislaw Lem. Malone became a fierce critic of the bank bailouts arguing that they would lead to massive cuts in public spending. Below is a film of the recent talk he gave at NCAD.

Debt or Democracy? with David Malone. 6pm, 21st October, NCAD

Posted by praxispamphlet on October 14, 2011
Posted in: Events. Tagged: David Malone, Debt or Democracy, NCAD. Leave a Comment

The Praxis and Pedagogy group at GradCAM
& The Irish Debt InfoGraphic Project present:

Debt or Democracy? with David Malone

Friday 21th October, 2011, 6 – 8pm
Harry Clarke Lecture Theatre, National College Of Art and Design
100 Thomas Street, Dublin 8

Author and documentary filmmaker David Molone’s BBC documentary High Anxieties- The Mathematics of Chaos (2008), was one of the first films to be made about the financial crisis, accurately anticipating the problems that were to unfold in the economy. In 2008 Malone began commenting on the financial pages of the Guardian newspaper’s website about the credit crunch and the ensuing financial crisis under the pseudonym Golem XIV, the name of a military supercomputer in a novel of the same name by the Polish science fiction writer Stanislaw Lem.
Malone became a fierce critic of the bank bailouts arguing that they would lead to massive cuts in public spending. In November 2010 his highly acclaimed book about the crisis, The Debt Generation, was published in the UK by Level Press.

“In the Debt Generation, David Malone comes to a similar conclusion as I came to making Inside Job: that the financial system, as presently constituted, isn’t just a danger to our economy, but to our very democracy.”

Charles Ferguson, Director of Inside Job

David will be joined by a diverse panel including members from the IDIP (Irish Debt InfoGraphic Project), to analyse the current economic situation, focussing on the question, What is worth knowing? This discussion is being organised as part of the IDIP research programme, which is developing an online graphic history of the Debt Crisis in Ireland.

This is a free public event, however, places are limited, and booking is strongly recommended. Please send an email to: praxis@gradcam.ie to reserve your place.

praxispamphlet.wordpress.com
www.idip.ie

GLENN RIKOWSKI: Capitorg and the constitution of the Human in Contemporary Society.

Posted by praxispamphlet on May 20, 2011
Posted in: Events. Tagged: Capitorg, Glenn Rikowski. Leave a Comment

 

Date & Venue: Wednesday, May 25th, 6-8pm. Harry Clarke Room, NCAD, Dublin 8.

Time: 6 – 8pm

Educator Glenn Rikowski will be visiting Dublin to talk on

Capitorg: Education and the Constitution of the Human in Contemporary Society. 
Our life is constrained by the social relations that Capital coordinates. The Educational discourses of neoliberalism, promoting literacy for job opportunities, economic advancement, and individual success are of paramount importance to producing human capital rather than human beings. Neoliberal literacy includes training students and workers to accept “a new work discipline” and conditioning their will to maximize the accumulation of capital and wealth. As students increase their marketability, they “are always already shaped by the labyrinthine circuits of capitalist desire” (McLaren & Farahmandpur, 2002, 241).  We are not just learning, teaching, and living in neoliberal capitalist societies, but are becoming “a new life-form: human-capital” through “the capitalization of humanity” (Rikowski, 2002, 111). This is a free public event, however, places are limited, and booking is strongly recommended. Please send an email to: praxis@gradcam.ie to reserve your place. For more information visit praxispamphlet.wordpress.com or www.gradcam.ie

 

Biographical note: Dr. Glenn Rikowski is a senior lecturer in Education Studies in the School of Education at the University of Northampton.

 

Contact:  This is a free public event, however, places are limited, and booking is strongly recommended. Please send an email to: praxis@gradcam.ie to reserve your place. For more information visit praxispamphlet.wordpress.com or www.gradcam.ie



Peter Hallward- The Will of People and the Struggle for Democracy

Posted by praxispamphlet on January 18, 2011
Posted in: Events. Tagged: Democracy, Haiti, Peter Hallward, Philosophy, Will. Leave a Comment


Date & Venue: Thursday 17th Febuary, Wood Quay Venue, Civic Offices, Dublin 8.

Time: 6 – 8pm

Canadian political philosopher Peter Hallward will be visiting Dublin to talk on

“The Will of the People and the Struggle for Democracy’.

This talk, organised by the Praxis and Pedagogy seminar group,will try to clarify and defend the once-familiar notion of a democratic political will, understood as a rational practice of inclusive and egalitarian self-determination. As conceived by thinkers ranging from Rousseau to Fanon, exercise of an autonomous ‘will of the people’ involves a process of collective self-emancipation. It requires a capacity for association, deliberation, and prescription, as well as the power to implement political decisions in the face of whatever resistance they encounter. In the past, it was the militant assertion of such a popular will, for instance in the French, Haitian and Russian revolutions, that posed the most far-reaching challenges to the existing order of things; unsurprisingly, today’s reactionary political establishment (along with a good deal of contemporary philosophy and critical theory) is largely organised around its exclusion or disruption. But the struggle continues.

Biographical note: Peter Hallward teaches at the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Kingston University London, and is the author of Damming the Flood: Haiti and the Politics of Containment (2007), Out of this World: Deleuze and the Philosophy of Creation (2006), Badiou: A Subject to Truth (2003), andAbsolutely Postcolonial (2001).

Contact: This is a free public event, however, places are limited, and booking is strongly recommended. To reserve a place, or simply find out more details, please send an email to praxis@gradcam.ie, or contact Edia Connole at edia.connole[at]gradcam.ie

Readings:

Radical Politics & Political Will
The Will of the People: Notes Towards a Dialectical Voluntarism

Politics of Prescription

From the Guardian, In Egypt and Tunisia the will of the people is not a hollow cliche

Further Links:

Radical Philosophy

Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities
Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy
The London Graduate School

http://m.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/jan/31/egypt-tunisia-will-of-the-people?cat=commentisfree&type=articl

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  • Recent Posts

    • Harvard Economics Students Walk Out In Protest Over ‘biased’ Course.
    • David Malone: Debt or Democracy
    • Debt or Democracy? with David Malone. 6pm, 21st October, NCAD
    • GLENN RIKOWSKI: Capitorg and the constitution of the Human in Contemporary Society.
    • Peter Hallward- The Will of People and the Struggle for Democracy
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