Daniel Ellsberg
American economist and whistleblower known for releasing the Pentagon Papers
Daniel Ellsberg's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Political Science Economics
Daniel Ellsberg's Degrees
- Bachelors Economics Columbia University
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Why Is Daniel Ellsberg Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Daniel Ellsberg was an American political activist, economist, and United States military analyst. While employed by the RAND Corporation, he precipitated a national political controversy in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret Pentagon study of U.S. government decision-making in relation to the Vietnam War, to The New York Times, The Washington Post, and other newspapers.
Daniel Ellsberg's Published Works
Published Works
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage Axioms (1961) (7388)
- Bargaining And Group Decision Making (1960) (267)
- Risk, ambiguity, and decision (2001) (168)
- Classic and Current Notions of “Measurable Utility” (1954) (162)
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage Axioms: Reply (1963) (107)
- The Theory and Practice of Blackmail (1968) (77)
- Subjective Probability and Expected Utility without Additivity Author ( s ) : David Schmeidler Source : Econometrica (1989) (74)
- Papers on the war (1972) (51)
- THE CRUDE ANALYSIS OF STRATEGIC CHOICES (1960) (48)
- Protest and survive (1980) (44)
- A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers) (2002) (38)
- The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner (2017) (22)
- Secrecy and National Security Whistleblowing (2014) (19)
- Call to Mutiny (1981) (15)
- Recurrent Objections to the Minimax Strategy: Rejoinder (1959) (8)
- Motility of isolated bowel segment Iowa model III (1994) (8)
- Secrecy Oaths: A License to Lie? (2004) (5)
- Decision, probability, and utility: Risk, ambiguity, and the Savage axioms (1988) (5)
- What Is to Be Done (1992) (4)
- Counterinsurgency Tactics Led to Haditha, My Lai (2006) (3)
- Risk , Ambiguity , and the Savage Axioms Author ( s ) : (2017) (2)
- Roots of the Upcoming Nuclear Crisis (2017) (1)
- Vietnam Labyrinth: Allies, Enemies, and Why the U.S. Lost the War (2012) (1)
- PUBLIC GOODS AND PUBLIC BADS: COMMENTS ON MANCUR OLSON'S 'THE OPTIMAL INSTITUTIONAL MIX, (1969) (1)
- ASSANGE’S ESPIONAGE CHARGES: (2019) (1)
- The original whistleblower (2021) (0)
- Ending Nuclear Terrorism: By America and Others (2008) (0)
- The Vietnam War and Presidential Power (2017) (0)
- Some Lessons from Failure in Vietnam (1969) (0)
- KAHN ON WINNING IN VIETNAM: A REVIEW (1968) (0)
- THE DAY LOC TIEN WAS PACIFIED (1971) (0)
- V. The War Abroad (at Home) (1994) (0)
- Physics Opportunities at the Kim Jong Un-Collider (2017) (0)
- The Third Wave's Third Way: Networks vs. Elementary Particles ‐ Summer 2006 (2008) (0)
- On Combating the Abuse of State Secrecy * (2007) (0)
- Can We Win in Vietnam? By Armbruster Frank E., Gastil Raymond D., Kahn Herman, Pfaff William and Stillman Edmund (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1968. Pp. 427. $7.95.) (1969) (0)
- A Final Comment (1958) (0)
- Due by next Tuesday Registration plans changed for spring (2012) (0)
- Dissent, the Nixon Doctrine, and Our Covert Empire (2022) (0)
- APSA Awards and Recipients (1982) (0)
- VAGUENESS AND DECISION: A REJOINDER (1963) (0)
- The Ellsberg paradox is a paradox in decision theory and experimental economics in which people's choices violate the expected utility hypothesis. (1) It is generally taken to be evidence for ambiguity aversion. The paradox (2010) (0)
- Discussion Group on The Political Role of Military Force " Coercive Diplomacy II in the Ligh t of Vietnam : Some Preliminary Notes (2002) (0)
- U.S. Nuclear Terrorism (2019) (0)
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What Are Daniel Ellsberg's Academic Contributions?
Daniel Ellsberg is most known for their academic work in the field of political science. They are also known for their academic work in the fields of and economics.
Daniel Ellsberg has made the following academic contributions: