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The Logic of Collective Action

Olson's 1965 landmark demonstrating that rational individuals will <em>not</em> voluntarily contribute to public goods — the book that overturned pluralist and Marxist assumptions about shared interests producing organized action.
Mancur Olson's 1965 book The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups demolished the prevailing assumption that groups with shared interests will naturally organize to pursue them. Olson demonstrated, with rigorous economic logic, that rational individuals will free-ride on collective goods whenever possible — enjoying benefits they did not pay for — and that this logic becomes more severe as groups grow larger. The book introduced selective incentives, the small-group advantage, and the free-rider problem as foundational concepts in political economy. Six decades later, its framework has become the most precise available tool for diagnosing why the AI-affected population fails to organize while concentrated technology interests dominate the regulatory landscape.

In The You On AI Field Guide

The book emerged from Olson's Harvard dissertation, supervised by Thomas Schelling, and arrived at a moment when political science was dominated by pluralist assumptions that shared interests automatically produced organized groups. David Truman's The Governmental Process (1951) had codified the view that American democracy

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