Milicent Fawcett is mostly known as a feminist and campaigner for women's rights, as well as the name behind Britain's Fawcett Society, which continues that work today.
As an economist, she wrote "Political Economy for Beginners" in 1870, and was committed to the political rather than scientific application of economics which developed in the coming decades.
The book was still published 40 years later, when the 10th edition was released.
Fawcett also blended her campaigning work and her economics, proposing the "crowding hypothesis" that women were driven by informal and formal institutions into lower-paid work. Because all women were driven towards this sub-set of jobs, Fawcett hypothecated that the oversupply of labour kept their wages down. The thesis is still discussed by feminist and labour economists today.