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In Memoriam
Linda Loury
Professor Linda Datcher Loury peacefully passed away on Thursday,
September 22nd in her home in Brookline, after a long battle with cancer,
surrounded by her husband Glenn Loury and their sons Glenn Jr. and Nehemiah.
We know you join us in offering our warmest condolences to the Loury family
at this very sad time. Linda was an intellectual and moral pillar of the
Economics Department and the Tufts community, and there are no adequate words
to express the enormity and sadness of this loss for all of us.
Linda was a Professor of Economics at Tufts, which she had joined as an
Assistant Professor in September 1984. She obtained a B.A. in Economics with
a Concentration in Black Studies, with distinction, from Swarthmore College in
1973, and her Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
in 1978, with a dissertation on "The Effects of Higher Women's Labor Force
Participation Rates on the Relative Earnings of Black and White Families."
Prior to joining Tufts, she held research and teaching positions at the University
of Michigan from 1978 to 1982, and a Post-Doctoral Fellowship at Harvard (W.E.B
DuBois Institute and J.F. Kennedy School of Government) between 1982 and 1984.
Linda was a leading scholar in the fields of Labor Economics, Economics of Education,
Social Economics, and the Economics of Inequality and Discrimination – with a focus on
the economic effects of social identity and social networks. Her early research on
family and neighborhood effect was truly path-breaking, placing her among the founders
of the new and growing field of Social Economics. Her contribution on understanding
the effects of community and family background on achievement is a modern classic,
and far ahead of its time in light of the contemporary views of the importance of
social interactions as a source of inequality. Her more recent contributions include
influential work on job information networks, neighborhood effects, and inequality,
as well as innovative research on the effects of gender and skin color on educational
and economic outcomes. In addition to being an outstanding and path-breaking scholar,
Linda was a dedicated, innovative and effective teacher and mentor, who had introduced
numerous new courses in our curriculum, such as "Women in the Labor Market,"
"Income Inequality, Poverty and Economic Justice," "Topics in Non-Competitive Labor markets,"
and, most recently, "Blacks and Labor Markets," based on a book Linda was writing
with her husband Glenn.
All who have ever interacted with Linda at Tufts will never forget her razor-sharp
intellect, cultural depth, no-nonsense wisdom, exceptional moral compass, fortitude
of character, unpretentiousness, and warm sense of humor. Our department and the
university were blessed by her presence for 27 years. She will be sorely missed by
all colleagues, students, and members of the Tufts community.
Linda's funeral took place on Sunday, October 2nd, at the Bethel AME church on
Walk Hill St. in Boston. A memorial service to honor Linda's life and intellectual
achievements took place on the Tufts University campus on Saturday, November 5th.
Professor Linda Loury's obituary in the Boston Globe can be accessed
here.
View program of the Linda Datcher Loury's Celebration of Life Memorial
View photos of our celebration of Linda Loury's life
(held on 11/05/11)
View
video of the memorial
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