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David Jordan Office Files

Papers have been transferred to acid-free folders and given Mr. Jordan's labels.  Contents have not been sorted or arranged chronologically.  Obvious duplicate copies were discarded, as were faculty meeting minutes, which are available in the Archives, RG-F, series 1. Boxes 1.4 contain office files, arranged alphabetically by subject.  Boxes 5 and 6 contain papers relating to Grinnell or Iowa history.  Other student projects which Mr. Jordan supervised relating to college history are in RG-S, series 2.1.

Bill Ferguson Office Files

Bill Ferguson is the Gertrude B. Austin Professor of Economics at Grinnell College, where he has taught since 1989. He is the author of The Political Economy of Collective Action, Inequality, and Development (Stanford University Press, 2020) and Collective Action and Exchange: A Game-Theoretic Approach to Contemporary Political Economy (Stanford University Press, 2013). Both books advance the proposition that successful development requires resolving underlying collective-action problems. The earlier book begins with micro-level foundations of political economy and ends with macro-level attention to knowledge, distributions of power, institutions, and growth. The latter book extends these macro themes by focusing on how distributions of power shape configurations of institutions and associated types of collective-action problems that condition prospects for achieving functional political and economic development.

Professor Ferguson is past Secretary-Treasurer of the Midwest Economics Association and prior chair and founder of Grinnell’s Policy Studies Concentration. After graduating from Grinnell College in 1975, with a B.A. in history, he worked as a neighborhood community organizer in Seattle Washington until 1982, when he shifted to studying economics, receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 1989. His teaching has ranged from institutional political economy, applied game theory, and policy analysis to labor economics, British economic policy, and climate policy. His early publications focused on the wage-productivity gap in the US economy and modeling implicit bargaining power in employment relationships. After 2008, he shifted to institutional political economy and development. While writing his 2013 book, he visited Indiana University’s Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, where he discussed his 2013 book manuscript with the late Elinor Ostrom. (From College website, 2022.)

Grant Gale Office Papers

Papers were transferred to the college archives from two file drawers in Grant Gale's office in May 1995.  The contents of box 5 were donated by Mark Schneider in January 2002.

James T. Fudge, Professor of Music

2 boxes, donated by James Fudge, August 1999. This collection contains the office files of Dr. Fudge from 1966-1988. Included are letters of correspondence with other schools and directors, schedules, a few programs/fliers, and information about the music department and the singing groups. There is also one folder of miscellaneous off-campus programs and events related to James Fudge and his family. Box 1 contains the files from 1966 to 1985. Box 2 contains the remaining files up to 1988 and the miscellaneous folder.

Bradley Bateman's course materials for the class From Herron to Hopkins: the role of the Social Gospel at Grinnell College

Located in range 11 at offsite storage. The purpose of the course From Herron to Hopkins was to study the role that the Social Gospel movement played in the shaping of Grinnell College and both its self-image and the image of the college from an outside perspective. The student papers and journals from the social gospel course document the students' reactions to the required course readings and their understanding of the principles in a culminating final paper.

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