Bradley W. Bateman is Professor of Economics and the President at Randolph College in Virginia. Works include Capitalist Revolutionary: John Maynard Keynes (Harvard University Press, 2011, with Roger Backhouse), Keeping Faith, Losing Faith: Religious Belief and Political Economy (Duke University Press, 2009, with Spencer Banzhof), The Cambridge Companion to Keynes (Cambridge University Press, 2006, with Roger Backhouse), and Keynes’s Uncertain Revolution (University of Michigan Press, 1996). His work on the religious influences on American economics has appeared in many journals, including the Journal of Economic Perspectives, History of Political Economy, and the Journal of the History of Economic Thought.
Jean-Michel Bonvin is Professor of Socioeconomics and Sociology at the University of Geneva. His research interests include welfare reforms and theories of justice, especially the capability approach. He was Principal Investigator on the Overcoming Vulnerability: Life Course Perspectives (NCCR-LIVES) and EU projects such as Re-InVEST (2015–19) and SoCIEtY (2013–15). He is the Director of the Centre for the Study of Capabilities (CESCAP). Works include Empowering Young People in Disempowering Times (Edward Elgar, 2018, with Hans-Uwe Otto, Valerie