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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...
The Intriguing Economics Of College Athletes Licensing Their Images
Last week, California governor Gavin Newsom signed into law California’s Fair Pay to Play Act, which will allow California college athletes to sign commercial deals for the use of their identities and likenesses. The law, which will also allow student athletes to hire agents to negotiate on their behalf, will take effect in 2023. This could be the law that upsets the NCAA’s long-standing cozy apple cart that has successfully funneled almost all collegiate athletic revenue to universities, and the economics of this law are fascinating.
Restoring Liberty To The States
Our Constitution delegates lawmaking power to Congress and local polities—so why are we ruled by administrative bureaucrats?
Rethinking Policy Education: The Summer Policy Boot Camp
At the Hoover Institution, the Summer Policy Boot Camp reflects a major rethinking about how to train people to become successful policy leaders. While students may learn about policy issues and analysis in the classroom, some Stanford scholars say that they do not always develop the skills needed after college to deliver policy results in the real world.
The Confirmation Process We Deserve
Keith E. Whittington
Will Newt Neuter the Courts?
Executive Discretion on Steroids
Beware of government actions aimed at "virtuous" ends.
Corporations Are People, Too
Those demanding restrictions on campaign funding claim to want power for the people. In reality they stand for crass partisan power—that of incumbents. By Richard A. Epstein.
Unions Take High Culture Hostage
Carnegie Hall is symbolic of how our current system of labor law can destroy our civic institutions.
Trump’s Executive Orders On Immigration
On January 27, 2017, President Donald Trump issued Executive Order 13769 titled Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States. He replaced it with Executive Order 13780 on March 6, 2017,
When Bureaucrats Get Away With Murder
Regulations may be well intentioned, but their costs can be devastating and even life-threatening.
Confine Presidential Impeachment To Criminal Acts
Impeachment is far too grave a remedy to invoke on the basis of a shaky case resting on highly partisan assumptions.
Teaching The Federalist
What happens when South Korean students take a close look at American democracy. By Peter Berkowitz.
Should Roe V. Wade Stand?
The deepest divisions over benchmark abortion case break along constitutional lines.
Jimmy Lai And The Fight For Freedom In Hong Kong
TRANSCRIPT ONLY
Democracy and freedom currently hang by a thread in Hong Kong. How much longer will China tolerate dissent before violently crushing the protests? What is America's role and responsibility in the fight to save liberty in Hong Kong?
What Would Hamilton Do?
Revisiting the founding father to whom a national debt, properly funded, represented “a national blessing.” By Michael W. McConnell.
Beyond Austerity
What Was Roberts Thinking?
The Chief Justice was neither an umpire nor a statesman. Only a lawyer.
The Court that Couldn't Say "Stop!"
At a crucial moment, the Roberts court blinked, setting back both the Constitution and any dreams of limited federal power. By John Yoo.

