McKay, Ailsa

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
McKay, Ailsa
Date of birth
1963-05-25
Date of death
2014-03-05
Place of death
Glasgow (Scotland)
Other associated place
Nottingham (England)
Field of activity
Economics
Associate group
Glasgow Caledonian University
University of Nottingham
Occupation
Economists
Associated Language
eng
Gender
female
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 78179886
Wikidata: Q4697094
Library of congress: n 2004151677
Sources of Information
  • McKay, Ailsa. The future of social security policy, 2005:Ecip t.p. (Ailsa McKay) data sheet (senior lecturer in economics at Glasgow Caledonian Univ.)
  • Scotsman WWW site, Mar. 11, 2014(Professor Ailsa McKay; b. 25 May 1963; d. 5 Mar. 2014, Glasgow; prof. of economics; Glasgow Caledonian Univ.; PhD, Nottingham Univ.)
  • RA. LCN 2014
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Wikipedia description:

Ailsa McKay (7 June 1963 – 5 March 2014) was a Scottish economist, government policy adviser, a leading feminist economist and Professor of Economics at Glasgow Caledonian University. She was noted for her research on gender inequalities and the economics of the welfare state, for her contributions to feminist economics, as a leading proponent of the universal basic income concept and as one of the UK's foremost experts on gender budgeting. She served as Vice Dean of the Glasgow School for Business and Society, and was also well known for her support of Scottish independence and as a key adviser to the Scottish government and First Minister Alex Salmond on economic and welfare state policies. Ailsa McKay is highlighted as a leading intellectual figure in the campaign for independence in Alex Salmond's 2015 book The Dream Shall Never Die. Both Salmond and his successor Nicola Sturgeon have highlighted McKay's influence on Scottish gender equality policies. She was a member of the board of directors of the left-wing Jimmy Reid Foundation think tank, and was an adviser to the United Nations. With Margunn Bjørnholt, she co-edited the book Counting on Marilyn Waring: New Advances in Feminist Economics, which was published days before her death. The Ailsa McKay Fellowship, the Ailsa McKay Lecture, one of the foremost honours in feminist economics, and the McKay House at Lenzie Academy are named in her honour.

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