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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...
How Will Hungarians Pay Taxes Next Year?- Cabinet Brainstorms
Hungary’s government has apparently made an about face in tax policy.
The Meaning Of Their Service
A retired four-star Marine Corps general on the clarifying effect of combat experience, the poison of cynicism and how veterans can help revive American optimism.
There Is Another Russia Beyond Putin
Despite the Russian president’s popularity, hopes remain of a post-imperial state at ease with itself and its neighbors.
Secretary Of Defense Ashton Carter To Give Drell Lecture, Focus On Cybersecurity And Innovation
Secretary of Defense Ashton B. Carter will deliver CISAC's annual Drell Lecture at Stanford University next Thursday, giving a major speech to unveil the Pentagon's updated policies on innovation and cybersecurity.
Andrew Mccarthy’s Distortion Of The Corker Bill (And The Constitution)
As things stand today, the only way for Congress to prevent the President from waiving statutory sanctions against Iran is to pass a law over his veto that withdraws the waiver authority it gave him in the past. All the Corker Bill does is to freeze the President’s waiver authority for 30-42 days so that Congress can determine if it wants to remove the President’s waiver authority.
EU's Antitrust Charge Against Gazprom: Another Putin Disaster
The Wall Street Journal reports that the European Union’s antitrust commission will file charges against Gazprom, the Russian state-owned natural gas company, on Wednesday.
New Laws For New Threats Like Drones And Bioterrorism
You walk into your shower and see a spider. You don’t know whether it is venomous—or whether it is even a real spider. It could be a personal surveillance mini-drone set loose by your nosy next-door neighbor, who may be monitoring the tiny octopod robot from her iPhone 12.
Another Response To Andrew Mccarthy On The Corker Bill Iran Review
The Iran deal by itself, no matter what it says, cannot permanently lift U.S. statutory sanctions. Only Congress can permanently change the sanctions regime. Even if Obama agrees in the handshake deal to permanently reduce sanctions, he cannot follow through on that pledge by himself.
Admiral Gary Roughead On The John Batchlor Show (19:14)
Admiral Gary Roughead, USN (Ret.), an Annenberg Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution, discusses China's strategic view of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the Maritime Silk Road, and the importance of controlling the sea lanes.
The New Global Marketplace Of Political Change
Western democratic powers are no longer the dominant external shapers of political transitions around the world. A new global marketplace of political change now exists, in which varied arrays of states, including numerous nondemocracies and non-Western democracies, are influencing transitional trajectories.
Paul Gregory On The John Batchelor Show (19:15)
Hoover fellow Paul Gregory discusses Gazprom and the EU's antitrust charge against Gazprom, which has used its dominance of European markets to control the flow of natural gas to Europe. If the lawsuit is successful then Gazprom would be forced to open its pipelines to third party suppliers.
The Disintegration Of The World
“Was ExxonMobil worried about a skirmish in Georgia? I doubt it, but now companies like that one care a lot about the details of the conflict in eastern Ukraine. The conflict in Donetsk is being closely watched day by day by multinational corporations and is influencing their decisions.”
Beyond Human Rights Rituals A Case for State-Nation Specific Negotiation Of UNDRIP Implementation
Tod Lindberg, research fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, argues that Posner’s historical analysis is essentially wrong, “International human-rights law is good and useful not because it compels, which it mostly can’t, but because it inspires.”
Federal Reserve Accountability And Reform
The Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs met in an open session to conduct a hearing on "Federal Reserve Accountability and Reform." John Taylor's Testimony | Allan Meltzer's Testimony.
Understanding The Cyber Threat And Implications For The 21st Century Economy
Video of the hearing regarding "Cyber Threats and Implications in the 21st Century Economy." Herbert Lin's Testimony
Unmanned Aircraft Systems: Key Considerations Regarding Safety, Innovation, Economic Impact, And Privacy
Testimony Before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation Subcommittee on Aviation Operations, Safety, and Security
U.S. Defense Policy Issues Pertaining To The Asia-Pacific Theater
Hoover fellow Admiral Gary Roughead's, USN (Ret.) testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee. Roughead discusses US national security interests and objectives in the Asia‐Pacific region and the changes and activity taking place there.
How Empirical Studies Of Political Violence (Can) Help Policymakers
In a recent New York Times opinion piece, “Where Terrorism Research Goes Wrong,” social psychologist Anthony Biglan argues that, given the importance of antiterrorism programs and the huge resources devoted to them, far too few are subjected to randomized controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating their efficacy.
Co-Authors: Eli Berman, Jacob N. Shapiro, Ethan B. Kapstein
“You Built Your Own Monument”
General James Mattis speaks to his fellow vets.
“We’re Accountable to You”
Defense Secretary James Mattis, a former Hoover fellow, on running the Pentagon: “You go in, roll up your sleeves, and go to work.”

