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David Gordon (economist born 1944) : ウィキペディア英語版
David Gordon (economist)

David M. Gordon (1944 – March 16, 1996) was an American economist and Professor of Economics at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. He founded the Institute for Labor Education and Research in 1975 and later the Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis in New York City. Gordon worked to disseminate progressive economic ideas to the general public and to contribute to the development of a left-political movement in the United States. Gordon's work dealt mainly with discrimination and labor market segmentation. He coined the term "social structure of accumulation" which gave rise to an extensive body of work on the impact of political, social and economic institutions on long-term investment and growth.
==Biography==
David Gordon was born in Washington, DC, grew up and went to high school in Berkeley, CA, and spent his college years at Harvard University, where he was awarded a B.A. in Economics in 1965. His father, Robert Aaron Gordon, was President of the American Economic Association. His mother, Margaret S. Gordon, was well known for her contributions to the economics of employment and social welfare policy. His brother, Robert J. Gordon, is a prominent macroeconomist.
As a graduate student of economics at Harvard in the late 1960s, Gordon worked as a research assistant evaluating Great Society programs targeting the hard-core unemployed, and he was active in the development of the new US school of radical political economy. He completed a doctoral thesis on "''Class, Productivity, and the Ghetto''" and earned his Ph. D in Economics in 1971. From 1970 to 1973 he served as a research associate at the National Bureau for Economic Research, then located in New York City. In 1973 he joined the Economics Department at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research, where he continued to teach until his untimely death—from congenital heart failure—at the age of 51.
Gordon's career was marked both by an extraordinary range of academic contributions to the field of economics and by his continual commitment to develop, and to make available to the general public, economic analyses that could support the work of political activists working for social justice. His academic contributions are reflected in numerous books and articles published in professional journals, as well as in his founding and directorship of the Center for Economic Policy Analysis. His contributions to the development of a progressive political movement in the United States include many policy papers, newsletters, op-ed pieces, radio and TV interviews, and frequent participation in public discussion forums, as well as the founding of the Institute for Labor Education and Research—subsequently renamed the Center for Democratic Alternatives—in New York City. Gordon Hall is the home of the University of Massachusetts Political Economy Research Institute.

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