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Joe Ament

Assistant Professor

L4E Degrowth Lead

PRONOUNS He/Him

Joe Ament
Pronouns He/Him
Alma mater(s)
  • PhD, ¶¶Òõ̽̽, Natural Resources, 2019
  • BBA, The University of Michigan, Finance and Economics, 2005
Affiliated Department(s)

The Department of Community Development and Applied Economics

BIO

As an ecological macroeconomist, my research and teaching is focused on monetary theory and policy in the context of social and ecological justice. My main interests lie in the role of macroeconomic and banking policy on ecological and social issues like housing affordability, income and wealth equity, sustainable agriculture, and resilient social systems. Because of this, I spend a lot of time thinking about how a different understanding of money could inform a more just and sustainable approach to policy.

I am very interested in public banking, radical tax reform, and fiscal and monetary policy that is aimed at social and environmental issues rather than price stability alone. The study of money is deeply entwined within the sociological, ecofeminist, anthropological, and historical literature. Because of this I am also very interested in the fields of embeddedness and dualism, and how humans imagine themselves separate from one another and nature—and importantly, how that imagining informs how we create and use money.

Courses

CDAE 1020: World Food, Population & Development
CDAE 1610: Principles of Community Development
CDAE 3530: Macroeconomics for Applied Economics
FS 2010/NFS 2113: US Food Policy and Politics
PA 6110: Policy Analysis and Program Evaluation
PA 6060: Policy Systems

Publications

Area(s) of expertise

Monetary theory, ecological economics, degrowth, embeddedness, ecofeminist political ecology, labour theory, post-liberal theory.

Bio

As an ecological macroeconomist, my research and teaching is focused on monetary theory and policy in the context of social and ecological justice. My main interests lie in the role of macroeconomic and banking policy on ecological and social issues like housing affordability, income and wealth equity, sustainable agriculture, and resilient social systems. Because of this, I spend a lot of time thinking about how a different understanding of money could inform a more just and sustainable approach to policy.

I am very interested in public banking, radical tax reform, and fiscal and monetary policy that is aimed at social and environmental issues rather than price stability alone. The study of money is deeply entwined within the sociological, ecofeminist, anthropological, and historical literature. Because of this I am also very interested in the fields of embeddedness and dualism, and how humans imagine themselves separate from one another and nature—and importantly, how that imagining informs how we create and use money.

Courses

CDAE 1020: World Food, Population & Development
CDAE 1610: Principles of Community Development
CDAE 3530: Macroeconomics for Applied Economics
FS 2010/NFS 2113: US Food Policy and Politics
PA 6110: Policy Analysis and Program Evaluation
PA 6060: Policy Systems

Publications

Areas of Expertise

Monetary theory, ecological economics, degrowth, embeddedness, ecofeminist political ecology, labour theory, post-liberal theory.

Advising

Advising 

I am not taking any students for Fall 2025. If you have questions about advising or L4E, please contact:

Chris

Emily

Ali