E. L. R. Williamson Explained

Ernest Landon Russell Williamson ("Landon Williamson") was a Canadian economist active in the middle decades of the 20th century.[1]

He is best known as the author of Freedom from Fear: Can it be Achieved in Canada?, which appeared in 1945.[2] In this distinctively Canadian work, he considers one of Franklin Roosevelt's Four Freedoms. He adopts a stance that later would characterized as "Red Tory", and argues from a conservative standpoint for what might now be called a social safety net. Such a stance, though not unusual in Canada in subsequent years, was regarded at the time as idiosyncratic, as was his early advocacy of environmentalism.[3]

He was admitted to the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) soon after the Second World War in recognition of this contributions to the war effort, and later in his life worked as a teacher. He died in 2000.[4]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: EXAMINATION OF CANADA'S EXTERNAL TRADE AND THE PROBABLE FUTURE EFFECT ON CANADA'S ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT - SUBMISSION TO THE ROYAL COMMISSION ON CANADA'S ECONOMIC PROSPECTS, E.L.R. WILLIAMSON, CONSULTING ECONOMIST . 1955 . . 39 . English . 4 August 2024 .
  2. Web site: Freedom from Fear: Can It Be Achieved in Canada? (1945) .
  3. News: E.L.R. . Williamson . Cat Defence . . 4 . 4 May 1960 . 4 August 2024 . English . 1197-2823 .
  4. Web site: Ernest Landon Russell Williamson .