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  • Introduction: History of Economics as History of Social Science–Roger E. Backhouse and Philippe Fontaine

    Part 1. Central Issues in Cold War America

    Psychiatry and the Social Sciences, 1940–2009–Andrew Scull

    Poverty in Cold War America: A Problem That Has No Name? The Invisible Network of Poverty Experts in the 1950s and 1960s–Romain Huret

    The Enemy Within: Academic Freedom in 1960s and 1970s American Social Sciences–Tiago Mata

    Rebellions across the (Rice) Fields: Social Scientists and Indochina, 1965–1975–Teresa Tomás Rangil

    Part 2. Conflicts over Method

    Tool Shock: Technique and Epistemology in the Postwar Social Sciences–Joel Isaac

    Ground between Two Stones: Melville Herskovits and the Fate of Economic Anthropology–Heath Pearson

    Part 3. Interdisciplinarity in Practice

    Marginal to the Revolution: The Curious Relationship between Economics and the Behavioral Sciences Movement in Mid-Twentieth-Century America–Jefferson Pooley and Mark Solovey

    The Price of Success: Economic Sovietology, Development, and the Costs of Interdisciplinarity–David C. Engerman

    Specializing in Interdisciplinarity: The Committee on Social Thought as the University of Chicago's Antidote to Compartmentalization in the Social Sciences–Ross B. Emmett

    Part 4. The Economic and the Social

    Economics and Sociology: From Complementary to Competing Perspectives–Daniel Geary

    Drawing New Lines: Economists and Other Social Scientists on Society in the 1960s–Jean-Baptiste Fleury

    Conclusions: The Identity of Economics—Image and Reality–Roger E. Backhouse and Philippe Fontaine

    Contributors

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