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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...
Time to Join The Law of the Sea Treaty
The U.S. has more to gain by participating in convention deliberations than by staying out...
Obama's Syria Debacle Laid Bare
Sen. John McCain took to the Senate floor on Feb. 12 to shine a bright light on the plight of the Syrian people and its consequences.
Empower Iranians vs. Tehran
Iraqi Ironies
Can We Win?
Yes, but only in a particular way. We need to achieve a “sufficient victory. By Daniel Pipes.
The Danger in “Fixing” the CIA
Despite opinion to the contrary, our nation’s intelligence services are not broken, nor can they be “fixed” simply by reshuffling the CIA’s organizational chart. The true strengths—and limitations—of our country’s spy agencies. By Richard A. Posner.
The Trouble with Kim Jong Il
We need a better class of dictator running North Korea. Challenges the administration faces in dealing with Kim Jong Il. By Henry S. Rowen.
What Tocqueville Knew about Religion
Although in many parts of the world religious beliefs have led to bloodshed, in the United States religion, as Tocqueville himself understood, actually plays a unifying role. By Hoover fellow Charles Hill.
Bush and the Liberal Tradition
Why liberal democracy in America depends on promoting liberal democracy abroad. By Hoover fellow Peter Berkowitz.
How Long?
When will the regime of Kim Jong Il finally collapse? By Charles Wolf Jr.
Money For Security Forces, Not Hostage-Takers
Last month, the Iranian regime celebrated the 35th anniversary of the storming of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, which was followed by an abortive American rescue attempt that helped sink Jimmy Carter’s presidency.
A Nonproliferation Regime For The 21st Century
The Path Forward On Arms Control
We need a new ‘engine room’ with direct access to the president.
Silas Palmer Fellow Traces The Iranian Diaspora In The United States
The first wave of Iranian migration to the United States happened decades before the 1979 Revolution; many came to the U.S. as student sojourners looking to receive an American education. Many also used the opportunity to protest and distribute information about the Shah’s political policies, social conditions in Iran, and the lived realities of American imperialism. It is from this engagement that expressions of resistance among Iranians in the United States expanded to encompass a diverse array of political leanings.
New Shultz Project Eyes Governance In An Emerging New World
The world ahead will not be like the world behind us. That is a core belief often expressed by Hoover Institution Senior Fellow George Shultz, and also the driving force behind his new year-long project, Governance in an Emerging New World, which aims to tackle some of humanity’s most difficult issues.
Hoover Institution Fellow Arye Carmon Contends That Israel Needs A Constitution
In the seventy years since its founding, the state of Israel has built all the hardware of a thriving formal democracy—institutions, procedures, and elections—but has yet to fully install the software that will allow it to emerge as a substantive democracy, argued Hoover Institution Distinguished Fellow Ayre Carmon in a discussion with SF Weekly writer Jonathan Curiel at San Francisco’s Commonwealth Club.
Centennial Hoover Institution Forum Focuses On Restoration Of Responsible Citizenry
A properly formed citizenry is the basis for a strong democracy in America that can be sustained in future generations, explained scholars as part of the Hoover Institution’s centennial conversation series, A Century of Ideas.

