. A central ECOINT strategy is the use of original sources in private and public archives. Within the reporting period, ECOINT has built up a unique database of sources, including the papers of Eleanor Hinder, Frances Perkins, Edith Penrose, Frank McDougall, Gunnar Myrdal, and select documents from CEPAL, UNECE, UNECA, UNCTAD, ECAFE, ECOSOC, ILO, and the WORLD BANK.
. ECOINT has established ‘international economic thinking’ as a new object of study in the historiographical scholarship on globalization. This was achieved through ECOINT-workshops, the presentation of research in international settings, the establishment of individual and institutional networks and the publication of foundational texts.
. Targeting its objectives, ECOINT’s work has focused on
. The conceptualisation of ‘international economic thinking’ and ‘international economic thinkers’. This has been done in an interdisciplinary way and in critical conversation with established literatures, such as historiographies of economic thought and development, the IR literature on international order, the multidisciplinary scholarship on the planetary, various streams of IPE.
. The identification and study of individual women ‘international economic thinkers’. Findings have been made available in an online database of profile-texts.
. The study of key sites of ‘international economic thinking’, e.g. League of Nations, ILO, UNCTAD, UNECE, ECOSOC, CEPAL, UNECA, World Bank, through the synchronic and diachronic mapping of notions of and debates about the role and purpose of ‘the economy’. Findings have been published in working papers and journal articles.
. Multidisciplinary discussions on how to grasp the nature and role of business people as ‘international economic thinkers’. The distinction between social actors organized in dedicated organisations, such as the ICC, and individuals taking up administrative positions within UN organisations has been identified as conceptually significant and will guide the ongoing research.
. The identification, conceptualization and application of significant themes, such as social/economic, technical/political, cooperation/integration, public/private.
. Across its research, ECOINT has considered and discussed gender and geographical biases reproduced in existing knowledges and datasets
. Research is currently feeding into a co-authored book on the historiography of ‘international economic thinking’ (under contract with Cambridge University Press) and an edited collection that showcases a variety of methodological approaches to ‘international economic thinking’ and empirical findings on its manifestations across different sites.