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POLLY HILL: CROSSING AND CONTESTING THE BOUNDARIES OF ANTHROPOLOGY, ECONOMICS, AFRICAN STUDIES, AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP STUDIES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2021

Robert W. Dimand*
Affiliation:
Robert W. Dimand: Department of Economics, Brock University;
Kojo Saffu
Affiliation:
Kojo Saffu: Goodman School of Business, Brock University.
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

Polly Hill spent her long, productive, and at times controversial career crossing and contesting disciplinary boundaries. She graduated in economics at Cambridge, but her doctorate was in social anthropology—with economist Joan Robinson as dissertation supervisor. Her thirteen years at the University of Ghana were initially in economics, then in African studies, and her readership at Cambridge was in Commonwealth studies. As a woman in several male-dominated academic disciplines without a secure base in any (and with distinctive, unorthodox opinions in each), she never obtained a tenure-track appointment despite ten books and fifty scholarly articles. Her books drew attention to the underrecognized agency of indigenous entrepreneurs while her Development Economics on Trial: The Anthropological Case for the Prosecution (1986) critiqued a discipline, disciplinary boundaries, and outside experts, both mainstream and radical.

Type
Symposium: Economics and its Boundaries
Copyright
© The History of Economics Society, 2021

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Footnotes

We are very grateful to Gerardo Serra for sharing his transcripts from the Polly Hill Papers.

References

ARCHIVAL COLLECTION

Polly Hill Papers, Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL (see Barbara K. Hammond and Musifiky Mwanasali 1994, and subsequent online revisions). Cited as PH.Google Scholar
A bibliography of Polly Hill’s published writings appeared in 2006 in Cambridge Anthropology 26 (1): 6269.Google Scholar

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