Bloomington, Indiana: Elinor Ostrom, an Indiana University professor of political science and the first woman to win a Nobel Prize in economics, died Tuesday at age 78.

AJ Mast/AP

“Indiana University has lost an irreplaceable and magnificent treasure with the passing of Elinor Ostrom,” IU president Michael McRobbie said in a statement. “Throughout her lifetime, Lin has brought distinction to the university though her ground-breaking work, which received the ultimate recognition in 2009.”
Through her research, Ostrom demonstrated how common resources—forests, fisheries, oil fields or grazing lands—can be managed successfully by the people who use them, rather than by governments or private companies.
“What we have ignored is what citizens can do and the importance of real involvement of the people involved—versus just having somebody in Washington...make a rule,” Ostrom had said the day her Noble Prize was announced. She had said some people had discouraged her from seeking a doctoral degree when she applied for graduate school, but that she loved studying economics.
She is survived by her husband, Vincent Ostrom, a retired political science professor with whom she founded IU’s Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis. The university said Ostrom was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in late 2011.
Ostrom was born and grew up in Los Angeles, and she studied at UCLA. She graduated in three years then worked in the private sector before entering graduate school and receiving master’s and doctoral degree in political science from UCLA. She moved to Indiana when her husband was hired for the political science faculty.
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