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Selected Works of Gordon Tullock, The |
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In Ten Volumes
By Gordon Tullock Edited by Charles K. Rowley
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Table of Contents
Publication Date: February 2006
6 x 9. 4,220 pages.
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Cloth (SET) |
0-86597-530-2 |
978-0-86597-530-9 |
$240.00 |
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0-86597-541-8 |
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During the past half-century Gordon Tullock has continually advanced
the frontiers of political economy, most particularly with respect to the
workings of representative democracies and autocracies. As his reputation
grows, Liberty Fund announces a ten-volume collection, The Selected
Works of Gordon Tullock. This series, edited and arranged thematically by
George Mason University’s Duncan Black Professor of Economics Charles
K. Rowley, brings together Tullock’s most significant contributions to economics,
political science, public choice, sociology, law and economics, and
bioeconomics.
Tullock followed a unique path in his academic career. His exposure to
formal economic training was limited to one course taught by Henry
Simons as part of the law curriculum at the University of Chicago.
Although Tullock does not hold a degree in economics, he is one of the
most respected and widely cited economists of the modern age. His influence
on modern political economy is simply immense. As Rowley points
out in his introduction to the first volume of this series, “Gordon Tullock is
an economist by nature rather than by training.” Assuredly, his “outsider”
perspective and his intellectual brilliance cultivate an uncommon ability to
think “outside the box” and to explain scientifically phenomena that are
often intuitively obvious but not readily demonstrated.
Tullock and his 1962 coauthor, Nobel laureate James M. Buchanan, are
widely recognized as cofounders of public choice, a field that systematically
applies the rational choice approach of economics to the analysis of political
markets. Public choice analysts evaluate the impact on political outcomes
exercised by voters, special interests, bureaucrats, legislators, and
presidents on the assumption that each such actor pursues his own self-interest.
In so doing, public choice demonstrates that the “invisible hand,”
identified by Adam Smith as associating self-interest in the private marketplace
with the wealth of a nation, does not necessarily hold in political
markets, where the “visible boot” of government, unless carefully checked,
may result in economic ruin.
Tullock has made pathbreaking contributions to constitutional political
economy, the vote motive, rent-seeking theory, bureaucracy, law and economics,
and bioeconomics. He has expanded the frontiers of political economy,
widely defined.
Scholars will undoubtedly find the extensive breadth and depth of
Tullock’s writings enriching. The general reader, as well as the student of
politics, and all who love economic liberty, will find Tullock’s prose lucid,
readable, and sprinkled with wit. His forensic argument is penetrating,
compelling, clear, and unambiguous. His brilliant mind is surprisingly
accessible to us all.
Gordon Tullock is among a small group of living legends in the field of
political economics. The Selected Works of Gordon Tullock provides an
entree to the mind of an original thinker. Professor Rowley provides deliberately
sparse contextual introduction to each volume, opting to allow the
very able and eloquent Tullock to speak for himself.
Charles K. Rowley is Duncan Black Professor of Economics and a Senior
Fellow of the James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy at George
Mason University. He is also General Director of the Locke Institute.
The entire series includes:
Volume 1: Virginia Political Economy
Volume 2: The Calculus of Consent
Volume 3: The Organization of Inquiry (November 2004)
Volume 4: The Economics of Politics (February 2005)
Volume 5: The Rent-Seeking Society (March 2005)
Volume 6: Bureaucracy (June 2005)
Volume 7: The Economics and Politics of Wealth Redistribution (July 2005)
Volume 8: The Social Dilemma: Of Autocracy, Revolution, Coup d'Etat, and War (December 2005)
Volume 9: Law and Economics (December 2005)
Volume 10: Economics without Frontiers (January 2006)
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