James A. Field

James A. Field
Born (1880-05-26)May 26, 1880
Milton, Massachusetts
Died July 16, 1927(1927-07-16) (aged 47)
Nationality American
Institution University of Chicago
Alma mater Harvard University
Influenced Hazel Kyrk

James Alfred Field (May 26, 1880 – July 16, 1927[1]) was an American economist and Professor of Political Economy at the University of Chicago, known as one of the proponents of institutional economics[2] and as demographer, who contributed to the theory of population and its history.[3]

Life and work

Born in Milton, Massachusetts, Field obtained his MS in economics at Harvard University in 1903, and continued to do post-graduate work at Harvard and at the University of Berlin.[1]

Field started his academic career in 1903 as assistant in economics at Harvard University, and became Austin teaching fellow in economics for a year, and instructor in 1906 to 1908. From 1906 to 1908 he was also instructor in economics at Radcliffe College. In 1908 he started at the University of Chicago as instructor in economics, and was promoted assistant professor in 1910, associate professor in 1913, and full professor in 1918[1] until his death in 1927.[4] In the year 1923-24 he was also dean of the College of Arts and Literature.[1]

Filed was also known as founding president of the Illinois Birth Control League,[5] and associate editor of the Journal of Political Economy, and during World War I was special investigator for the Council of National Defense in its division of statistics. He was elected fellow of the American Statistical Association.[1]

Work

Field came into prominence in the years from 1913 to 1919, when he was involved with professor of Economics Leon C. Marshall and the economic historian Chester W. Wright in "attempts to move economics instruction away from the 'rigorous drill in orthodox theory' or the 'straight-jacket of conventional theory' to a method of instruction emphasizing the development of economic institutions, inquiry into current problems and issues, and fostering of creativity and originality (field 1917). To this end, they produced a book of readings to supplement the usual texts (Marshall, Wright, and Field 1913)."[6]

Essays on population, and other papers, 1931

In a 1931 review of "Essays on population, and other papers" in The Eugenics Review Norman E. Himes (1899-1949), wrote:

THIS volume, by one of the greatest demographers America has produced, is a notable contribution to population thought and its history. An original, meticulously accurate scholar, Field has, unfortunately, been little known to European, and especially to Continental scholars. It is a great service, therefore, that one of his students should collect his more important scattered papers and notes, and edit them so ably. The solidity of the volume is matched by a felicity of literary presentation rarely found among economic writers; a combination especially refreshing in this day in America when, with growing numbers in our colleges, almost every underpaid professor becomes the hack author of a dull, poorly-written text-book.
The range of topics is wide. Part I contains twelve essays on eugenics, birth control, and Malthusianism, the treatment being essentially historical and critical. Part II collects three papers on economics and statistics, while Part III is a catalogue of the author's library on population. Since the Dictionary of American Biography has failed to include the career of Field, it is fitting that the editor has added a short biography together with a distinctive photograph of the author.[3]

And more specific about its content:

I have always felt-perhaps there is a personal bias-that Essay III on "The Early Propagandist Movement in English Population Theory" was the best paper Field ever published. I know of no finer example of historico-economic research in the English language, no matter what tests are applied. Though Professor Graham Wallas deserves credit also, it is not an ungenerous distinction to say that Field was the first scholar to appraise in full measure Francis Place's efforts for birth control at the beginning of the last century. Much of the Place correspondence which Dr. Stopes has upon various occasions claimed to have " discovered " was known to, and used by, Field.
Essays IV, V, and IX are specifically on eugenics. They are Galtonian in idealism; but the author is mindful of the numerous difficulties. The article reprinted from the Quarterly Journal of Economics is an excellent historical and critical review of euge-nical literature produced up to the time of publication (1911). Regrettably, the author never followed it up.[3]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Frank Moore Colby, Allen Leon Churchill, Herbert Treadwell Wade (1928) The New international year book. p. 286
  2. Malcolm Rutherford (2011). The Institutionalist Movement in American Economics. p. 126-151
  3. 1 2 3 Himes, Norman E. "Essays on population and other papers by James Alfred Field, together with material from his notes and lectures compiled and edited by Helen Fisher Hohman, with a foreword by James Bonar, LL. D." The Eugenics Review 23.3 (1931): 258-261.
  4. Rosanna Ledbetter (1976) A history of the Malthusian League, 1877-1927. p. xvi
  5. Population in Perspective, 1968, p. 448
  6. Malcolm Rutherford (2011). The Institutionalist Movement in American Economics. p. 132
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