Search results for "Gordon Tullock"

The Economics and Politics of Wealth Redistribution

[…] the democratic state in the redistribution of wealth. He adds a refreshing dose of realism to a field of economics that is often dominated by idealistic visions. Gordon Tullock is Professor Emeritus of Law at George Mason University, where he was Distinguished Research Fellow in the Center for Study of Public Choice and University […]

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The Calculus of Consent

The Calculus of Consent was co-authored by Buchanan with Gordon Tullock, with whom Buchanan collaborated on many books and academic enterprises throughout their careers. As Robert D. Tollison states in the foreword, “ is a radical departure from the way democracies conduct their business. The Calculus is already a book for the ages.” This […]

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Conference | Economics

The Intellectual Legacy of Gordon Tullock

Gordon Tullock considered economics a tool that could be used to study and understand all human activity and even activity in nonhuman societies. The symposium gave scholars from a range of disciplines an opportunity to assess how Tullock's core ideas are advancing our understanding of a free society and continuing…

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Conference | Economics

The Legacy of Gordon Tullock

Gordon Tullock was one of the founders of the public choice school of economics, along with James Buchanan. Tullock’s revolutionary work on constitutions, bureaucracies, “rent-seeking,” and many other areas has helped to shape our understanding of the limits of democracy in protecting liberty and securing limited government. This conference explored…

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The Collected Works of James M. Buchanan

[…] that Buchanan produced in a distinguished career spanning more than half a century. Among the monographs are such famous works as The Calculus of Consent (coauthored by Gordon Tullock) and The Limits of Liberty, as well as Cost and Choice: An Inquiry in Economic Theory. The monographs have been cast into a new format, […]

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Testimonials

My first encounter with Liberty Fund was in 1980 at a ten-day summer conference in Blacksburg, Virginia—sponsored by James Buchanan and Gordon Tullock—with a host of notables including Shirley Letwin, Douglass North, Geoffrey Brennan, Charlie Plott, Karen Vaughn, and others. I was one of the few non-economists. It was this experience that led me, […]

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