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The history of political economy seeks to explain the historical dynamics that determine

the global production, distribution, and consumption of wealth across time. Political
economy is a broad field of inquiry, with a tradition that reaches back before modern
academic specialization and the separation of disciplines into departments. Therefore,
historians of political economy use many methods, seek to place economic life in
context, and pay persistent attention to questions of power, social relations, and
meaning.

Chicago has an large number of faculty members and graduate students working in the
history of political economy. There are department members who focus on every period
between the ancient and the contemporary. They conduct research on Africa, China,
Europe, India, and North and South America. Many are engaged in questions of global
and transnational history, as well as questions of theory. There are currently core
groups of faculty and graduate students working on common thematic interests, many
of which intersect:

 The historical relationship between the economy, the environment, and anthropogenic climate
change

 The role of the state and the law in conditioning economic life

 The centrality of gender and sex difference

 The historical and theoretical problem of capitalism

 The conceptual apparatus of economic history, including methods of quantification and


modeling

 Issues of labor and inequality

 The histories of slavery and emancipation and of race and racism

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