A Nobel Prize-winning University of Chicago economist whose work on the economics of slavery triggered a furious debate has died.
The university says in a statement that Robert Fogel died yesterday after a brief illness. He was 86.
Fogel wrote 22 books, the last one published in April. He first came to prominence in academic circles in the 1960s when he concluded that railroads weren't as important to the U.S. economy as was widely believed.
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The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences cited both his work on railroads and slavery when it awarded him the 1993 Nobel Prize for Economics.