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  1. Vincent Alfred Ostrom (September 25, 1919 – June 29, 2012) was an American political economist and the Founding Director of the Ostrom Workshop based at Indiana University and the Arthur F. Bentley Professor Emeritus of Political Science.

  2. 10. Jan. 2014 · Elinor and Vincent Ostrom founded Indiana University’s Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, which changed how people think about shared resources, public services, centralization, and privatization. Elinor Ostrom overcame considerable barriers to become the first woman to win the Nobel Prize for Economics.

  3. 9. Jan. 2013 · Vincent Ostrom (September 25, 1919–June 29, 2012) will be remembered as one of the early mainstays of the Public Choice Society, having served as its President from 1967 to 1969. This publicly acknowledged role as a leader in the development of the public choice approach was merited.

    • David Lowery
    • dlowery@me.com
    • 2013
  4. I have been very fortunate that Vincent Ostrom and I were able to establish an effective research center with a different philosophical foundation during the early 1970s. Vincent named it the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis. He thought the term “workshop” conveyed a sense closer to his philosophical view of science as a ...

  5. 30. Jan. 2015 · Vincent Ostrom challenged epistemic choices at the foundation of modern political science and proposed an alternative conceptualization of democracy based on a theory of federalism he derived from The Federalist and Tocqueville’s Democracy in America.

    • Michael A. Fotos, Michael A. Fotos
    • Michael.fotos@yale.edu
    • 2015
  6. 3. März 2015 · Elinor (Lin) and Vincent Ostrom spent their lives creating a school of institutional analysis that focused on the power of human creativity to solve collective human dilemmas.

  7. Vincent Ostrom used the common pool resource concept in his teachingclasses that Lin attended—and thus could introduce nongovernmental organizations as part of the broader concept of public service as an “industry.”