Economics
At Sarah Lawrence College, economics is not taught as a set of techniques for working in a static field but as an evolving discipline. In the liberal arts tradition, Sarah Lawrence students approach the study of economics by addressing issues in historical, political, and cultural context. They analyze and evaluate multiple schools of thought as they relate to actual situations, exploring from an economic perspective such topics as globalization, growth and social policy, inequality, capitalism, and the environment. Students who have focused on economics have gone on to become union organizers, joined the Peace Corps, interned with United Nations agencies, gone to law school, and entered graduate programs in public policy and international development.
Economics courses
- Economic Behavior and Behavioral Economics
- First-Year Studies: From the Great Society to the Great Recession: The Economics and Politics of Inequality in America
- Industrial Competition, Labor Relations, and National Systems of Innovation
- Industrial Competition, Labor Relations, and National Systems of Innovation – Jamee Moudud
- Introduction to Economic Theory and Policy
- Macroeconomic Theory and Policy
- Money and Financial Crises: Theory, History, and Policy
- Social Entrepreneurship: Models for Intervention in Global Poverty
- The Political Economy of Global and Local Inequality: The Welfare State, Developmental State, and Poverty