
Contact Information
E-mail: gtulloc1@gmu.edu
Mailing Address:
Department of Economics, MSN 3G4
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
Gordon Tullock is University Professor of Law and Economics and
Distinguished Research Fellow in the James M. Buchanan Center for
Political Economy at George Mason University. He holds a joint
teaching position in the Department of Economics and the School
of Law. Professor Tullock received a J.D. from the University of
Chicago in 1947. He received an Honorary Doctorate of Laws from
the University of Chicago in 1992. Following periods of employment
as an attorney at law and in the US Department of State, Professor
Tullock taught at the University of South Carolina, the University
of Virginia, Rice University, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University, George Mason University and the University of
Arizona. In 1966, Professor Tullock became the Founding Editor
of the Journal of Non-Market Decision Making (later renamed Public
Choice). He remained Senior Editor of Public Choice until May 1990.
In 1968 (together with Charles Goetz) he established the Center
for Studies in Public Choice (renamed the Center for Study of Public
Choice in 1969 when James Buchanan joined Virginia Tech and became
Director of the Center). Professor Tullock is author of twenty-three
books and several hundred articles in economics, public choice,
law and economics, bio-economics and foreign affairs. He is best
known for such works as The Calculus of Consent (with James
M. Buchanan), The Logic of the Law, The Politics of Bureaucracy,
The Social Dilemma, Autocracy, The Economics of Non-Human Societies,
Rent Seeking and On Voting. Professor Tullock's 1967
article entitled: 'The Welfare Costs of Tariffs, Monopolies
and Theft' is a widely cited classic that has generated a major
ongoing research program in the political economy of rent seeking.
Professor Tullock has served as president of the Public Choice
Society, the European Public Choice Society, the Southern Economic
Association and the Western Economic Association. In 1998, Professor
Tullock was honored as Distinguished Fellow of the American Economic
Association.
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