About PCS

Statement of Purpose

The Public Choice Society is a tax-exempt public charity under Section 501(c)(3) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. The Society’s bylaws and IRS form 990 disclosures are available on request by emailing us at the Contact Form on this website.

The goal of the Society to facilitate the exchange of research and ideas across academic disciplines in the social sciences, particularly economics, political science, law, philosophy and related fields, on questions related to all aspects of collective action, primarily through the organization of an annual conference, and the maintenance of a scholarly network. It started in 1963 as the Committee on Non-Market Decision Making, when scholars from multiple disciplines became interested in the application of essentially economic methods to problems normally dealt with by political theorists. An annual conference and new journal were launched. In 1967 the group renamed itself The Public Choice Society. As the public choice research program has advanced in new and fruitful directions, the Society remains as a valued interdisciplinary and international forum for scholarly inquiry and exchange of ideas on the range of topics included in non-market decision making that transcend the boundaries of any self-contained discipline. For more about the origins of the Society, see the essay by James M. Buchanan below.

How to Join

Visit https://www.meetingsavvy.org/pcs. There you can easily set up your personal login credentials for the registration portal site, or simply login to the portal if you already have an account.

Scholars who attend and present their research at the annual conference enjoy a one year membership, which includes access to exclusive conference communications, and access to view papers being presented for the current year’s conference.

To reserve your space at the annual conference, click the Register tab above beginning October 1 of each year.


History of the Public Choice Society

Public Choice: The Origins and Development of a Research Program

by James M. Buchanan

[Editorial note: This essay was published in 2003 by the Center for Study of Public Choice. In the opening line of the essay, Professor Buchanan defines “public choice as a research program rather than as a discipline or even a subdiscipline.” The brief excerpt below is from the section of the essay in which Professor Buchanan has just described the origins and background of The Calculus of Consent, and he next recounts the role that he, Gordon Tullock, and others played in founding the Public Choice Society and related organizations. The entire essay is provided at the link below.]

Our book was well-received by both economists and political scientists. And, through the decades since its publication, the book has achieved status as a seminal work in the research program. The initial interest in the book, and its arguments, prompted Tullock and me, who were then at the University of Virginia, to initiate and organize a small research conference in Charlottesville in April 1963. We brought together economists, political scientists, sociologists, and scholars from other disciplines, all of whom were engaged in research outside the boundaries of their disciplines. The discussion was sufficiently stimulating to motivate the formation of a continuing organization, which we first called the Committee on Non-Market Decision-Making, and to initiate plans for a journal initially called Papers on Non-Market Decision-Making, which Tullock agreed to edit.

We were all unhappy with these awkward labels, but after several annual meetings there emerged the new name “public choice,” for both the organization and the journal. In this way the Public Choice Society and the journal Public Choice came into being. Both have proved to be quite successful as institutional embodiments of the research program, and sister organizations and journals have since been set up in Europe and Asia.

William Riker, who organized some of the early meetings, exerted a major influence on American political science through the establishment and operation of the graduate research program at the University of Rochester. Second- and even third-generation Riker students occupy major positions throughout the country and carry forward the research thrust in positive political analysis.

In the late 1960s, Tullock and I shifted to Virginia Polytechnic and State University, and in Blacksburg we set up the Center for Study of Public Choice, which served as an institutional home, of sorts, for visiting research scholars throughout the world. This center, and its related programs, operated effectively until 1983, when it was shifted to George Mason University, where its operation continues.

I shall not discuss in detail the institutional history of the society, the journal, the center, and related organizations. Suffice it to say here that these varying structures reflect the development and maturing of the whole research program.