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“The Place You Oughta Be”?

interview with John H. Cochrane, Niall Ferguson, H. R. McMaster, Lee Ohanian, Bill Whalenvia GoodFellows: Conversations From The Hoover Institution
Wednesday, February 24, 2021

California is home to the world’s fifth-largest economy—and a world of problems: businesses exiting, chronic homelessness, a dearth of affordable housing, devastating wildfires, maddening political correctness. Lee Ohanian, a Hoover Institution senior fellow and columnist for Hoover’s California on Your Mind series, joins Hoover senior fellow Niall Ferguson, H. R. McMaster, and John Cochrane to discuss what is to become of the tarnished Golden State.

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Prey: Ayaan Hirsi Ali on the Relationship between Immigration and Sexual Assaults in Europe

interview with Ayaan Hirsi Alivia Uncommon Knowledge
Tuesday, February 23, 2021

AUDIO ONLY

Hoover research fellow Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s new book is Prey: Immigration, Islam, and the Erosion of Women’s Rights. It examines the sharp rise in the number of sexual assaults in Western Europe that coincides with the sharp rise in illegal immigration from Muslim-majority countries.

Featured

America’s Excessive Government Spending Must Stop

by George P. Shultz, John F. Cogan, John B. Taylorvia Project Syndicate
Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Before his death on February 6, George P. Shultz, a former US Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of State, co-authored a final commentary warning of the dangers posed by the vast increase in US government spending in recent years, including during the COVID-19 crisis.

In the News

A COVID Reckoning: American Households Have Big Bills Coming Due

quoting Amit Seruvia Stanford Graduate School of Business
Monday, February 22, 2021

Congress and many lenders let families skip payments on mortgages and other loans during the pandemic. But those bills haven’t disappeared.

Renewing Indigenous Economies

Renewing Indigenous Economies: An Interview with Bill Yellowtail, Apsaalooke (Crow)

interview with Bill Yellowtailvia PolicyEd
Thursday, April 23, 2020

Bill Yellowtail grew up on his family’s cattle ranch on the Crow Indian Reservation in Montana. Holding a degree in geography from Dartmouth College, Yellowtail has been a rancher, educator, fishing guide, Montana state senator, and congressional candidate. An expert canoeist and fly fisherman, he was named Angler of the Year for 1991 by Fly Rod and Reel magazine.

Renewing Indigenous Economies

Renewing Indigenous Economies: An Interview with Daniel Stewart, Spokane Tribe

interview with Daniel Stewartvia PolicyEd
Thursday, April 23, 2020

Dan Stewart is a professor of Entrepreneurship. He received his PhD (organizational behavior) and MA (sociology) from Stanford University. His research appears in leading social science journals such as American Sociological Review, Organization Science, Research in the Sociology of Organizations, and American Indian Culture and Research Journal. He has coedited two of the leading volumes in Native American business and economics, Creating Private Sector Economies in Native America (Cambridge University Press) and American Indian Business (University of Washington Press).

Renewing Indigenous Economies

Renewing Indigenous Economies: An Interview with Sam Schimmel, Siberian Yupik & Kenaitze Indian

interview with Sam Schimmelvia PolicyEd
Thursday, April 23, 2020


Sam Schimmel is an Alaska Native with a passion for subsistence hunting and fishing, both of which keep him connected to tradition and infuse his efforts to combat the suicide, drug abuse, and cultural erosion that riddle Native communities. Having seen the effects of climate change in Alaska firsthand, Sam is also working to raise awareness of its impacts on tribal communities. He is an active member of Alaska’s Climate Action Leadership Team and serves on the Cook Inlet Tribal Youth Council as well as the Youth Advisory Board of the Center for Native American Youth.

Renewing Indigenous Economies

Renewing Indigenous Economies: An Interview with Chairman Ernest Sickey, Coushatta Tribe

interview with Ernest Sickeyvia PolicyEd
Thursday, April 23, 2020

As a leader of the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana for nearly three decades and tribal chairman from 1973 to 1985, Ernest Sickey is a trailblazer in the evolution of Indian affairs in the southeastern United States. He is best known for leading his own tribal community from legal obscurity to becoming the first tribe recognized by the state of Louisiana in 1972. Sickey also played an instrumental role in securing government-to-government status for the Coushatta tribe, laying the foundation for multiple economic ventures that have since placed the Coushatta among Louisiana’s top employers.

Renewing Indigenous Economies

Renewing Indigenous Economies: An Interview with Joseph Austin, Navajo Nation

interview with Joseph Austinvia PolicyEd
Thursday, April 23, 2020


Joseph Austin is a member of the Navajo Nation and cofounder of the ACES School (Austin, Crepelle & Ernest Sickey's School for Wards and Domestic Dependent Nations), a nonprofit corporation established to help the Native nations and Native people move past wardship and shift toward the path of nationhood.

Renewing Indigenous Economies

Renewing Indigenous Economies: An Interview with Misty Kuhl, Aaniiih Member

interview with Misty Kuhlvia PolicyEd
Thursday, April 23, 2020

Misty Kuhl is a member the Fort Belknap Indian Community, a first-generation college graduate, and the director of Native American Outreach at Rocky Mountain College.

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Economic Policy Working Group

 
The Working Group on Economic Policy brings together experts on economic and financial policy to study key developments in the U.S. and global economies, examine their interactions, and develop specific policy proposals.

Milton and Rose Friedman: An Uncommon Couple