Filter By:
Date
Topic
- Education (6) Apply Education filter
- Energy, Science & Technology (12) Apply Energy, Science & Technology filter
- Foreign Affairs & National Security (20) Apply Foreign Affairs & National Security filter
- Health Care (7) Apply Health Care filter
- History (25) Apply History filter
- Law (11) Apply Law filter
- US Politics (24) Apply US Politics filter
- Values & Social Policy (27) Apply Values & Social Policy filter
Type
Search
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...
The Jobs Picture Is Still Far From Rosy
There Is No 'Structural' Unemployment Problem
The unemployment rate has exceeded 8% for more than three years. This has led some commentators and policy makers to speculate that there has been a fundamental change in the labor market.
Stanford Professor Wins Labor Economics Prize
Bipartisan Tax Advice? You’ve Got It
California’s politicians are famously addicted to division and status quo. Can’t this time be different? By John F. Cogan and Christopher Edley Jr.
Megamergers—and Megafallacies
Is the recent wave of corporate megamergers cause for alarm? On the contrary, argues Hoover fellow David W. Brady. The new corporate giants are incorporating the best management techniques from around the world. Bigger isn’t better. Better is better.
If Only Hillary And Bernie Would Recall JFK
Kennedy knew ‘a rising tide lifts all boats.’ Today’s Democrats prefer class warfare over prosperity.
Click here to see What's Behind the Numbers?.
Business, Integrity, and Valor
Why business should be about a great deal more than merely doing deals. By Bowen H. "Buzz" McCoy.
Stalling the Start-Ups
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act was bad legislation in even more ways than you might suppose. By Clark S. Judge.
Progressively Worse
The Structural Foundations Of Monetary Policy: A Policy Conference
The conference will address the big issues in the structure of monetary policy.
Honesty for Hire
A few countries have found a way to stop graft and foster political stability: hire foreigners to collect their revenue. By Kris James Mitchener and Noel Maurer.
The Risks of a "Sputnik moment"
Do we really want the federal government to launch a national curriculum? By Williamson M. Evers.
Greener Than Thou
Plucking a few facts out of the bin of recycled slogans. By Terry L. Anderson and Laura E. Huggins.
Policy Seminar with Thomas Hazlett
Thomas Hazlett, former chief economist with the US Federal Communications Commission, presented his book The Political Spectrum: The Tumultuous Liberation of Wireless Technology on the history of spectrum regulation. In the moment that “net neutrality” is revoked, essentially deciding not to apply the utility regulation regime that telephones, radio, and TV worked under for most of the last century, the subject is certainly topical.
New Labour— and Old Unions
Are Britain’s unions, pushed into the political wilderness during the Thatcher years, reemerging as a political force? In a word, no. By Hoover fellow Gerald A. Dorfman.
Honor in the Task
How can we shore up the American work ethic? By honoring good work. By Russell Muirhead.
Labour’s Labor Problem
Why Tony Blair’s Labour Party has kept the labor movement at arm’s length. By Gerald A. Dorfman.
The Revolutionary Republic
In 1911, China rejected feudalism to enter the modern era. A new Hoover exhibit on a century of change. By Hsiao-ting Lin and Lisa Nguyen.

