TY - JOUR AB - Justice has, of late, re‐emerged as an important area of professional concern for all economists. However, in that justice is a fundamentally normative, value‐laden concept it proves troublesome to those who aspire to the strictures of “positive science”. This puts social economists in a position of distinct advantage in the consideration of justice issues for they are avowedly normative in their approach. The intention in this essay, implicit in the title, is to make some contribution to the explicit articulation of the justice criteria ensconced in the instrumentalist theory of value, and to suggest the affinity of this view with social economics. VL - 12 IS - 6/7 SN - 0306-8293 DO - 10.1108/eb013998 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/eb013998 AU - Hickerson Steven R. PY - 1985 Y1 - 1985/01/01 TI - Justice and the Social Economist: An Instrumentalist Interpretation T2 - International Journal of Social Economics PB - MCB UP Ltd SP - 90 EP - 103 Y2 - 2024/04/16 ER -