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Revision as of 12:46, 18 June 2019


H. Scott Gordon (1924-2019) was a Canadian economist born in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Education and teaching career

H. Scott Gordon began his teaching career at Carleton University (then Carleton College) in Ottawa and organized the Economics Department there in 1948. Later, during the summers, he would return to Canada from his teaching post at Indiana University to teach the history of economic thought at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. For many years he was a Professor in both the Department of Economics and the Department of History of Philosophy and Science at Indiana University.

The Tragedy of the Commons

Although many people are familiar with The Tragedy of the Commons, a widely-read 1968 essay by American ecologist Garrett Hardin (who argued that if there are no limits to use of a common-pool resource, the inevitable result is overuse and eventual destruction of the resource itself), most do not realize that the argument also had been made in more formal terms by economist H. Scott Gordon as early as 1954 and even earlier in 1833 by the British economist William Forster Lloyd. Scott's most well-known and seminal research on the tragedy of the commons was found in a 1954 Journal of Political Economy paper The Economic Theory of Common Property Resource: The Fishery. The role of individual fishing quotas (IFQs) also known as "individual transferable quotas" (ITQs) was shown by H. Scott Gordon in his original research about fishing economics.[1]

Biography

Scott, in his role as a mentoring professor at the University of Indiana and elsewhere, influenced the history of philosophy and economics via many of his former students and associates including Margaret Schabas[2], Robert Leonard,[3] Harold Kincaid, D. Wade Hands, and J. Alfred Broaddus. In Welfare, Property Rights and Economic Policy - Essays and Tributes in Honour of H. Scott Gordon by T.K. Rymes the author celebrates one of "Canada's most distinguished social scientist and economics scholars."[4], a book which was cited in the International Journal of Transport Economics.[5] / Rivista internazionale di economia dei trasporti, Vol. 20, No. 3 (OCTOBER 1993), p. 348 ...Policy - Essays and Tributes in Honour of H. Scott Gordon , Carleton University Press, 1993. This book celebrates one of Canada's most distinguished social scientist and economics scholars, H. Scott Gordon . Gordon is a past President of the Canadian Economics Association and a member of the Royal Society of Canada. His papers are in a repository at the University of Indiana.

References

  1. ^ Cochran, Jr., David M.; Reese, Carl A. (Spring 2012). Southeastern Geographer. University of North Carolina Press. p. 22. ISBN 080787258X. Evidence about IFQ systems began with H.Scott Gordon's (1954) seminal effort in the understanding of fishing economics. Gordon demonstrated why open access fisheries often perform poorly in economic terms . . . .
  2. ^ David Hume's Political Economy. ISBN 1134362501.
  3. ^ Leonard, Robert. Von Neumann, Morgenstern, and the creation of game theory : from chess to social science, 1900--1960. ISBN 9780511778278. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  4. ^ Rymes, T.K. "Welfare, Property Rights and Economic Policy - Essays and Tributes in Honor of H. Scott Gordon". Cambridge Press.
  5. ^ "H. Scott Gordon". International Journal of Transport Economics./Rivista internazionale di economia dei trasporti. 20, No.3: 348. October 1993.