PERSON
Mancur Olson
American economist (1932–1998) whose Logic of Collective Action overturned assumptions about group behavior — demonstrating that rational individuals systematically free-ride on public goods unless institutions alter the incentive structure.
Mancur Olson (1932–1998) was an American economist and political scientist whose work transformed the study of collective behavior, institutional design, and political economy. Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, he studied at North Dakota State University and Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar before earning his PhD at Harvard under Thomas Schelling. He spent most of his career at the University of Maryland, where he founded the Center for Institutional Reform and the Informal Sector (IRIS). His three major works — The Logic of Collective Action (1965), The Rise and Decline of Nations (1982), and the posthumously published Power and Prosperity (2000) — established concepts that remain foundational across economics, political science, and organizational theory.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Olson's intellectual trajectory can be traced through three increasingly ambitious applications of a single insight: rational individuals do not automatically produce collectively rational outcomes. The insight first appeared as a critique of pluralist political science in his 1965 book, which demonstrated that shared interests do not automatically
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