Alessandro Roncaglia (Roma, 1947) has been or is professor of economics, Sapienza University of Rome (1981-2017); editor, Moneta e credito and PSL (previously BNL) Quarterly Review (1989-2016), and member of their Editorial board (since 1979); managing board of editors, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics (since its foundation in 1978); member, Societ脿 Italiana degli Economisti (presidency Council, 1992-95; president, 2010-2013). He is president, associazione culturale Economia civile since its foundation in 2011, and member, Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (1998-2007 corresponding member; since 2007, national member; Joint academic administrator and member of the Presidency council, 2018-). Author of articles and books translated in many languages, from Spanish to Chinese, from Japanese to Russian, from Korean to Catalan; among these, Piero Sraffa (Macmillan Palgrave, 2009) and The wealth of ideas (CUP, 2005), the Italian edition of which (Laterza 2001) received the Jerome Blanqui Award of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought in 2003.
Alessandro Roncaglia
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Inflation and Power
It was a mistake to accept a 鈥榬eference price鈥-determination process for basic commodities led by finance
Theories of Economic Crises
The theoretical approaches to analyzing crises have behind them contrasting conceptions of the way the economy works
Experts on Trial: A Symposium
Widespread criticism of elites and their 鈥榚xperts 鈥 raises questions about how economists should perceive their role, and what role societies should give them. We invited four scholars to start an online conversation by sharing their perspectives
The economist as an expert: a prince, a servant or a citizen?
In his contribution to our ongoing series 鈥淓xperts on Trial鈥, Alessandro Roncaglia argues that viewing economists as princes or servants of power is inherently authoritarian. We should instead see the economist as a socially and politically engaged citizen
Featuring this expert
Finally, an Economist Takes on the Topic of Power
Alessandro Roncaglia has mulled the topic of power over his long and distinguished career 鈥 a topic most economists avoid. His new book explores the historical dynamics of power and asks how we can change its distribution today.
Experts on Trial: Introduction
Widespread criticism of elites and their 鈥榚xperts 鈥 raises questions about how economists should perceive their role, and what role societies should give them. We invited four scholars to start an online conversation by sharing their perspectives