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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...
Trump… Our Claudius
The president, like the Roman emperor, has been dismissed as a crude and crazy outsider.
The Cagey Mr. Comey
His own questionable actions might warrant an obstruction of justice charge.
Nation V. Tribe
America’s unique Constitution is an effort to subordinate the faction to the state.
Barr Trumps Mueller
The battle over whether the President engaged in obstruction of justice.
Michael Flynn’s Political Enemies
Liberal commentators have a weak case against Attorney General William Barr’s motion to set aside the guilty plea.
A World Free of Nuclear Weapons
Ending the threat of nuclear arms. By George P. Shultz, William J. Perry, Henry A. Kissinger, Sam Nunn.
Al Qaeda's Fantasy Ideology
War without Clausewitz
The Enemies of Our Enemy
We may not yet know what to do about the Islamists fighting in Libya, but we do know not to repeat certain mistakes. By Joseph Felter and Brian Fishman.
The Imperative to Protect Institutions: An Amended Front-Page Rule
“Every age has its own kind of war,” Clausewitz prognosticated in the early 19th century.[i] And the corollary is that every age has its own kind of intelligence requirements and seductions.
Articles On: NBA, Hong Kong, Voting, Prague, Economic Outreach, Confucius Institute, China''s Neo-Maoist Movement, and Apple
The Chinese Communist Party wages a series of foreign interference and coercion campaigns and this section provides articles and reports explaining those actions, as well as the damage they do abroad.
Cornstalks, Calvinball, And The Bridges At Toko Ri: Rightsizing The U.S. Navy
The main street of Washington, Georgia, is called Toombs Avenue in honor of the Georgia senator and Civil War general who was born nearby. In promoting the South’s secession as the war approached, Toombs reportedly claimed, “We can beat those Yankees with cornstalks!”
The Golden Age of Cooking
The ripening of new American Cuisine
The Transition: A Guide for the President-Elect
Seventy days that permanently shape a presidency
A Realistic Reset with Russia
Practical expectations for U.S.-Russian relations
Spirit of '96
The states carry the Republican revolution forward
UP IN SMOKE: The War on Tobacco
Are public health advocates asking the federal government to overstep its bounds, or is it time for a national tobacco policy? David E. Bonfilio, an American Cancer Society volunteer, James W. Stratton, Deputy Director of Prevention Services, California State Department of Health Services, and Jacob Sullum, Senior Editor of Reason magazine and author of For Your Own Good: The Anti Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public Health, discuss the war against tobacco.
STATUTE WITH LIMITATIONS: The Independent Counsel Statute
The independent counsel statute was passed by Congress as a response to Watergate. And it has been the subject of controversy and criticism ever since. This year the statute is up for renewal. David Brady, Hoover Institution Senior Fellow, Associate Dean and Bowen H. and Janice Arthur McCoy Professor of Political Science, Business and the Changing Environment, and Ethics at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, Professor, Department of Political Science at Stanford University, James J. Brosnahan, Senior Partner at Morrison & Foerster, Attorneys at Law, and John Donohue, Professor, Stanford Law School discuss whether Congress should reenact it, reform it, or let it die?
South Africa’s Fading Promise
James Kirchick on South Africa’s Brave New World by R.W. Johnson.
Gentlemen Revolutionaries
Peter Berkowitz on Revolutionary Characters: What Made The Founders Different by Gordon Wood

