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Article
Getting Past 'Rational Man/Emotional Woman': Comments on Research Programs in Happiness Economics and Interpersonal Relations
International Review of Economics (2010)
  • Julie A. Nelson, University of Massachusetts Boston
Abstract
Orthodox neoclassical economics portrays reason as far more important than emotion, autonomy as more characteristic of economic life than social connection, and, more generally, things culturally and cognitively associated with masculinity as more central than things associated with femininity. Research from contemporary neuroscience suggests that such biases are related to certain automatic processes in the brain, and feminist scholarship suggests ways of getting beyond them. The “happiness” and “interpersonal relations” economics research programs have made substantial progress in overcoming a number of these biases, bringing into consideration by economists a wide range of phenomena which were previously neglected. Analysis from a feminist economics perspective suggests several fronts on which research could most profitably continue.
Keywords
  • economics of happiness,
  • feminist economics
Publication Date
June, 2010
Publisher Statement

Revision of Global Development Working Paper No. 09-07 (available for download here).

For the final print version of this article, visit www.springerlink.com.

Citation Information
Julie A. Nelson. "Getting Past 'Rational Man/Emotional Woman': Comments on Research Programs in Happiness Economics and Interpersonal Relations" International Review of Economics Vol. 57 Iss. 2 (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/julie_nelson1/11/