Geoffrey Brennan

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Geoffrey Brennan is currently a professor of philosophy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a professor of political science at Duke University. Beginning in the Fall of 2003, he will be returning on a regular basis for a semester a year for (at least) five years. Among other things, he will be working to establish a UNC-Duke joint program in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (PP&E). Trained as an economist, Brennan has collaborated extensively with Nobel Prize winner James M. Buchanan and became the first non-American president of the Public Choice Society in 2002. When not teaching in the US Brennan is a faculty member in the Research School of Social Sciences (RSSS) at the Australian National University.

Brennan has published widely on rational actor theory, philosophy, and economics. He has held academic positions in several related departments at Australia National University and Virginia Tech. With Loren Lomasky he is winner of the American Philosophical Association's Gregory Kavka Prize in Political Philosophy for the paper "Is There a Duty to Vote?"

Brennan is an enthusiastic (but scarcely competent) golfer, and a semi-professional singer (for some years a national recitalist with the ABC).

[edit] Bibliography of works by Brennan

  • The Power to Tax (1980) (with James M. Buchanan)
  • The Reason of Rules (1985) (with James M. Buchanan)
  • Democracy and Decision: The Pure Theory of Electoral Preference (Cambridge University Press, 1993) (with Loren Lomasky).
  • Politics and Process: New Essays in Democratic Theory (Cambridge University Press 1989) (ed., with Loren Lomasky).
  • Democratic Devices and Desires (2000) (with Alan Hamlin)
  • The Economy of Esteem (2004) (with Philip Pettit)
  • Collected Works of James Buchanan (ed., with Hartmut Kliemt and Robert Tollison)


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