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James Ceaser is the Harry F. Byrd Professor of Politics at the University of Virginia, director of the Program for Constitutionalism and Democracy, and was a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author of several books on American politics and American political thought, including...
Roberts Thwarted Trump, But The Census Ruling Has A Second Purpose
The Supreme Court rejected Trump’s citizenship question, but the ruling serves a conservative counterrevolution against the administrative state.
This Experiment Has Some Great News For Our Democracy
The idea that our divisions are entrenched and unbridgeable is overstated.
Law Schools Are Flunking
Enrollment is sagging and student debt climbing. Law schools are a business—in desperate need of a new business model.
Torture By Tort
Condoleezza Rice Says US Will Weather Political Storm Over Comey Firing
Hoover Institution fellow Condoleezza Rice discusses the firing off FBI director James Comey.
With Kavanaugh, The Court Should Tame The Administrative State
This is an area he specializes in, and an issue whose time has come.
A Clash Of Judicial Visions
Defining the proper role of the Supreme Court in our constitutional system.
Keep The FBI Out Of Politics
Whether Trump’s firing of James Comey threatened national security is a question for Congress, not the FBI.
Rod Rosenstein And The Very Valid Recusal Question
The Professor, The Cop And The President
On July 23, Henry Louis Gates—regarded at Harvard as America’s most eminent African-American academic—was cuffed and locked up for disorderly conduct by a Cambridge policeman named James Crowley.
Comments on Salahi
Detainee Suit Against Rumsfeld Allowed to Proceed
General Cartwright on Offensive Cyber Weapons and Deterrence
Huffman on the John Batchelor Show
James Huffman, a member of the Property Rights, Freedom, and Prosperity Task Force, discusses judicial activism and how a disengaged judiciary is failing to protect the liberties of Americans.
Miller on the John Batchelor Show
Henry I. Miller, MD, the Robert Wesson Fellow in Scientific Philosophy and Public Policy at the Hoover Institution, discusses James Holmes, the Aurora killings, and mental illness on the John Batchelor Show.
The Opportunity Costs of Ignoring the Law of Sea Convention in the Arctic
The paper first briefly surveys the extent to which the provisions of United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) intersect with those of US interests in the Arctic. Not surprisingly, there is extensive overlap. The paper then reviews and critiques the arguments that (UNCLOS) is irrelevant or even antithetical to achieving those. interests; it then examines the case for UNCLOS, focusing on US interests on the Arctic seafloor and arguing that those interests are extensive and that accession would...
The Power Of Protocol
The now infamous Cambridge, Mass., incident that started when Sgt. James Crowley investigated a report of a possible break-in at the home of Henry Louis Gates, the well-known African-American Harvard professor, has dominated this past week's news...
Antitrust Consent Decrees in Theory and Practice
In Antitrust Consent Decrees in Theory and Practice (AEI Press, March 2007), Richard A. Epstein, the James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School, addresses the timeless dilemma of antitrust laws: how do we ensure that the antitrust tools intended to preserve competition are not used to undermine it?

