This book commemorates the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of
Charles Tiebout's enormously influential article, "A Pure Theory of
Local Expenditures," and honors the contributions of Wallace Oates as
expositor and popularizer of the Tiebout model. While Tiebout holds the
patent on the hypothesis, Oates brought the product to market. Based on
a conference cosponsored by the Lincoln Institute and the Rockefeller
Center for Public Policy and Social Studies at Dartmouth College in June
2005, this collection of scholarly articles evaluates the Tiebout
model's influence on the disciplines of economics, law, and political
science, and assesses future directions for public policy. It addresses
such topics as school choice, fiscal federalism, and land use
regulation.