This is volume 17 in the Major Conservative and Libertarian Thinkers series.
Series IntroductionAcknowledgementsThe Referencing of Buchanan's Work in this BookChapter 1: Buchanan's Intellectual BiographyIntroductionEarly Years and War YearsChicago Frank Knight Knut WicksellKnoxville, Tallahassee and the Italian YearVirginia Political Economy Charlottesville UCLA and ‘academia in anarchy' Blacksburg FairfaxNobel Prize and BeyondChapter 2: Buchanan's IdeasIntroductionThe Individualist PostulateThe Problems of AnarchyRightsPolitical Agreement and Constitutional Choice: Enter the StatePublic Goods, the Productive State and Non-Unanimous DecisionsConstitutional Democracy: Procedural not SubstantiveThe Problems of Non-contractarian Politics: Re-entering Anarchy Individual preferences and ‘democratic' outcomes Exploitation or the implementation of external costs Rent-seeking The state: the threat of LeviathanConstitutionalism: Solving the Problems of Politics A fiscal constitution Qualified majority decision-making Federalism Constitutional revolutionConclusionChapter 3: The Reception and Influence of Buchanan's WorkIntroductionThe Intellectual Impact and Influence of Public Choice TheoryThe Critics of Buchanan and Public Choice Theory Methodological individualism Self-interest Rationality Unanimity PowerThe Development of Public Choice as an Academic CommunityChapter 4: The Continuing and Future Relevance of Buchanan's IdeasBibliographyIndex
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