Efforts to diversify the economics profession have included increasing the number of African Americans and other people of color who enroll in and complete the PhD degree in economics. This article recounts the experiences of African Americans who entered graduate study at Stanford University between 1967 and 1984 and the university’s record of adding to the pool of African American PhD economists.
BrimmerA. F.HarperH. (1970). Perception of minority economic problems: A view of emerging literature. Journal of Economic Literature, 8, 783-806. Retrieved from https://www.jstor.org/stable/i347531
2.
BrowneR. S. (1970). The Caucus of Black economists. Review of Black Political Economy, 1, 112-113.
3.
CollinsS. M. (2000). Minority groups in the economics profession. The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 14, 133-148.
4.
DarityW. A.KreegerA. (2014). The desegregation of an elite economics department’s PhD program: Black Americans at MIT. History of Political Economy, 46(Suppl. 1),317-336. doi:10.1215/00182702-2716217
5.
LeeF. S. (2004). To be a heterodox economist: The contested landscape of American economics, 1960s and 1970s. Journal of Economic Issues, 38, 747-763 doi:10.1080/00213624.2004.11506727
6.
LymanR. W. (2009). Stanford in turmoil: Campus unrest, 1966-1972. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
7.
PriceG. N. (2009). The problem of the 21st century: Economics faculty and the color line. Journal of Socio-Economics, 38, 331-343.
8.
PriceG. N.SharpeR. V. (2018). Is the economics knowledge production function constrained by race in the USA?Journal of the Knowledge Economy, 1-16. doi:10.1007/s13132-018-0563-8
9.
RouseC.HooverG. A.2017. Report: Committee on the Status of Minority Groups in the Economics Profession (CSMGEP). American Economic Review, 107, 777-791. doi:10.1257/aer.107.5.777
10.
SimmsM. C.SwintonD. H. (1981). A report on the supply of Black economists. Review of Black Political Economy, 11, 181-202.