A scholar who pioneered the application of mathematics to the study of voter behaviour in elections has died.
Norman Schofield was born on the Isle of Bute, Scotland in 1944 and studied mathematics and physics at the University of Liverpool. He began his career as a fellow in the department of mathematics at the University of Essex (1969-70) and then became a lecturer in the department of government (1970-76). His years at Essex included a visiting lectureship at Yale University and concluded with a PhD on āMathematical Theories of Collective Behaviourā (1976), which secured him a position as associate professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin (1976-79).
After working in Texas, Professor Schofield returned to Essex as reader in economics (1979-86) but then moved for the rest of his life to Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, eventually as William Taussig professor of political economy as well as professor of political science and of economics.
A strong advocate of social choice theory, which explores how individual preferences come together to yield often unstable and dysfunctional collective results, Professor Schofield travelled everywhere from Azerbaijan to Mexico, from Israel to Italy, to witness elections. As a result, he was able to transform our understanding of how democratic politics works, and particularly how institutional factors affect outcomes, in books such asĀ Multiparty Government: The Politics of Coalition in EuropeĀ (with Michael Laver, 1990),Ā The Spatial Model of PoliticsĀ (2008),Ā The Political Economy of Democracy and TyrannyĀ (2009) andĀ Leadership or Chaos: The Heart and Soul of PoliticsĀ (with Maria Gallego, 2011). He also won theĀ William H. RikerĀ Prize in political science inĀ 2002. The citation referred to āhis fundamental work in āpureā theoryā which ādemonstrated the generic instability of political processesā and was later developed āthrough extremely imaginative use of his theoretical insights in sustained empirical analyses of political coalitions and constitutional politicsā.
When she arrived at Washington University in 1997, recalled Sunita Parikh, now associate professor of political science, she was already aware of Professor Schofieldās ātowering reputation in political science and was intimidated by both his intellectual brilliance and his tendency not to suffer fools, gladly or otherwise. But he couldnāt have been more welcomingā¦The sense of community and scholarly camaraderie Norman created was almost unique in my academic experience. And most of all, it was enormous fun.ā
Professor Schofield died on 12 October and is survived by his wife Liz, three children and three grandchildren.
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