
Ryan Walter
- Email:
- r.walter1@uq.edu.au
- Phone:
- +61 7 336 58210
- Mobile:
- 0449915833
Overview
Background
My research concerns the relationship between politics and economics and how that nexus has been shaped by the rise of economists as a new class of prestigious intellectual c. 1800-present. This concerns the skill sets and ethics of economists, above all, in relation to empirical evidence and their own political beliefs.
I wrote my PhD on the history of economic thought in Britain, focusing on how the rise of political economy changed political discourse. My current research continues this inquiry but in relation to the emergence of the political economist as a distinctive intellectual persona, focusing on Adam Smith, Thomas Robert Malthus, and David Ricardo. A major result has been to clarify the nature of the opposition that greeted the first economists. In short, 'theorising' had not been established as a prestigious activity; the presumption of intellectuals to reform their societies on the basis of 'theory' was perceived as an instance of philosophical enthusiasm, an intellectual pathology thought to underlie the French Revolution. Political economists responded to this opposition in divergent ways, producing fractiousness within their own ranks.
The long-range hypothesis to test in future work is that these teething issues were never resolved, with the result that the office of the economist in relation to government has never been stabilised by the development of a set of professional ethics and disciplines internal to economics of the type that lawyers and doctors innovated. If correct, this suggests that, while some economists have been domesticated by the imposition of bureaucratic offices, as for those working in central banks and treasury departments, most economists continue to roam wild, leaving our political institutions as exposed to their enthusiasm/truth as they were 200 years ago. The key statement of the initial stage of this research is Before Method and Models (Oxford, 2021). A series of subsidiary findings are published in Modern Intellectual History, Journal of the History of Ideas, Historical Journal, and Intellectual History Review.
Availability
- Associate Professor Ryan Walter is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor of Commerce, Murdoch University
- Bachelor (Honours) of Economics, Murdoch University
- Doctor of Philosophy, Australian National University
Research interests
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History of economic thought
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History of political thought
Works
Search Professor Ryan Walter’s works on UQ eSpace
2016
Journal Article
Utilitarianism and Malthus' virtue ethics: respectable, virtuous and happy
Walter, Ryan (2016). Utilitarianism and Malthus' virtue ethics: respectable, virtuous and happy. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 23 (1), 159-164. doi: 10.1080/09672567.2015.1074824
2015
Journal Article
The Rhetorical Standards of Public Reason in Australia
Walter, Ryan and Uhr, John (2015). The Rhetorical Standards of Public Reason in Australia. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 61 (2), 248-262. doi: 10.1111/ajph.12100
2015
Journal Article
A Review of “Adam Ferguson in the Scottish Enlightenment: The Roman Past and Europe's Future”
Walter, Ryan (2015). A Review of “Adam Ferguson in the Scottish Enlightenment: The Roman Past and Europe's Future”. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 22 (1), 135-140. doi: 10.1080/09672567.2014.924701
2014
Book Chapter
Economic management, rhetorical tactics, and the cost of promises
Walter, Ryan (2014). Economic management, rhetorical tactics, and the cost of promises. Studies in Australian political rhetoric. (pp. 33-62) edited by John Uhr and Ryan Walter. Canberra A.C.T., Australia: ANU E Press.
2014
Book
Studies in Australian Political Rhetoric
Uhr, John and Walter, Ryan eds. (2014). Studies in Australian Political Rhetoric. Canberra, ACT, Australia: ANU E Press.
2013
Journal Article
Budget talk: rhetorical constraints and contests
Walter, Ryan and Uhr, John (2013). Budget talk: rhetorical constraints and contests. Australian Journal of Political Science, 48 (4), 431-444. doi: 10.1080/10361146.2013.837426
2013
Journal Article
Foundations of modern international thought
Walter, Ryan (2013). Foundations of modern international thought. The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 20 (3), 513-517. doi: 10.1080/09672567.2013.795359
2012
Journal Article
Review of Iara Vigo de Lima’s Foucault’s archaeology of political economy
Walter, Ryan (2012). Review of Iara Vigo de Lima’s Foucault’s archaeology of political economy. Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics, 5 (1), 106-111.
2011
Journal Article
States and markets
Walter, Ryan (2011). States and markets. Review of International Studies, 37 (2), 691-713. doi: 10.1017/S026021051000094X
2011
Journal Article
Politics and economics: Beyond the contamination thesis
Walter, Ryan (2011). Politics and economics: Beyond the contamination thesis. Contemporary Political Theory, 10 (4), 444-462. doi: 10.1057/cpt.2010.35
2011
Journal Article
Hobbes, liberalism, and political technique
Walter, Ryan (2011). Hobbes, liberalism, and political technique. European legacy-toward new paradigms, 16 (1), 53-69. doi: 10.1080/10848770.2011.543374
2011
Journal Article
The Analysis of Interest and the History of Economic Thought
Walter, Ryan (2011). The Analysis of Interest and the History of Economic Thought. Parergon: Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 28 (2), 129-147. doi: 10.1353/pgn.2011.0090
2008
Journal Article
Foucault and radical deliberative democracy
Walter, Ryan (2008). Foucault and radical deliberative democracy. Australian Journal of Political Science, 43 (3), 531-546. doi: 10.1080/10361140802267290
2008
Journal Article
The economy and Pocock's political economy
Walter, Ryan (2008). The economy and Pocock's political economy. History of European Ideas, 34 (3), 334-344. doi: 10.1016/j.histeuroideas.2007.12.010
2008
Journal Article
Reconciling Foucault and Skinner on the state: The primacy of politics?
Walter, Ryan (2008). Reconciling Foucault and Skinner on the state: The primacy of politics?. History of the Human Sciences, 21 (3), 94-114. doi: 10.1177/0952695108093955
2008
Journal Article
Governmentality accounts of the economy: A liberal bias?
Walter, Ryan (2008). Governmentality accounts of the economy: A liberal bias?. Economy and Society, 37 (1), 94-114. doi: 10.1080/03085140701760890
Funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Associate Professor Ryan Walter is:
- Available for supervision
Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.
Available projects
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The History of Political Theory
I am currently investigating the history of political theory, building on Ian Hunter's "History of Theory" work. Early results have been published in Modern Intellectual History (2018). The leading finding so far is that the first "political theorists" were greeted with hostility because their presumption to remodel their societies on the basis of abstract reason was construed in relation to "enthusiasm" - a pathology affecting the mind by which it becomes enchanted with its own creations, above all, intellectual systems and dazzling ideas. These results suggest that a crucial line for further research to pursue is the means by which "theorists" achieved the status and prestige that they enjoy today.
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The History of Liberalism
My recent work loosely tracks the history of "liberalism", but with extreme scepticism towards the usefulness of that category. In short, the aim is to reject the lazy assertion that ideas make the world and instead track those texts and arts of reasoning that achieved institutional and political traction. This, in turn, requires focusing on texts and their reception histories, alongside investigating the personnel who staffed the liberal-democratic state. While my chief interest is in the role of political economists in shaping parliamentary deliberation and reform in nineteenth-century Britain - see the Bullion Controversy, Poor Laws, and Corn Laws - the bigger vision will need to take in party politicians, lawyers, and bureaucrats. Early results have been published in Intellectual History Review (2018).
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Conceptualising and Modelling Tax Competition: An Interdisciplinary Study of Policy and Strategy
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Priscilla Man, Associate Professor Jeffrey Kline
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Doctor Philosophy
A Game Theoretic Analysis of the OECD's Use of Competition in the International Tax Domain
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Jeffrey Kline
-
Doctor Philosophy
Conceptualising and Modelling Tax Competition: An Interdisciplinary Study of Policy and Strategy
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Priscilla Man, Associate Professor Jeffrey Kline
-
Doctor Philosophy
Conceptualising and Modelling Tax Competition: An Interdisciplinary Study of Policy and Strategy
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Priscilla Man, Associate Professor Jeffrey Kline
-
Doctor Philosophy
Conceptualising and Modelling Tax Competition: An Interdisciplinary Study of Policy and Strategy
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Priscilla Man, Associate Professor Jeffrey Kline
Completed supervision
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
Keynes, Keyserling, and the Intellectual Origins of the Employment Act 1946
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Frank Mols
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
Small is Beautiful: Knowledge Sharing Dynamics in Indonesia's Puskesmas Model of Primary Health Care
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Sam Hollingworth, Dr Alastair Stark
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
The Politics of Central Bank Approaches to Climate Change in East Asia and the West
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Shahar Hameiri
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2022
Doctor Philosophy
Why Debt Is More Than Just a Number: The Market Framing of Rising Government Debt in Selected EMU Countries Between 1989 and 2018
Associate Advisor
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2020
Doctor Philosophy
Disaggregating `the Enlightenment': An International Intellectual History of the English Enlightenment
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Richard Devetak
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2018
Doctor Philosophy
Post-Crisis Recovery and Policy Implementation: Public Asset Restoration in Queensland Local Government.
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Alastair Stark
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2017
Doctor Philosophy
Jeremy Bentham's Ethics of Intervention: the Utilitarian 'Moral Casuistry' of a Cosmopolitan Internationalist
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Richard Devetak
Media
Enquiries
Contact Associate Professor Ryan Walter directly for media enquiries about:
- Australian political rhetoric
- democracy
- liberal democracy
- liberalism
- Political rhetoric
- Political speech
- sovereignty
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