Filter By:
Date
Topic
- Economic Policy (2) Apply Economic Policy filter
- Foreign Affairs & National Security (1) Apply Foreign Affairs & National Security filter
- Health Care (1) Apply Health Care filter
- History (3) Apply History filter
- US Politics (3) Apply US Politics filter
- Values & Social Policy (4) Apply Values & Social Policy filter
Type
- (-) Remove Research filter Research
Search
Morris P. Fiorina is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Wendt Family Professor of Political Science at Stanford University. His current research focuses on elections and public opinion with particular attention to the quality of representation: how well the positions of elected...
Lazear discusses immigration and monetary policy on Bloomberg Television's Market Makers
Edward Lazear, the Morris Arnold and Nona Jean Cox Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and former chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, in discussing the immigration legislation being considered by the US Senate, recommends supporting a liberal immigration policy. Lazear also weighs in on the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy.
What Would Hamilton Do?
Revisiting the founding father to whom a national debt, properly funded, represented “a national blessing.” By Michael W. McConnell.
If You Smoke, Florida Wants to Tax You
The recent settlement between Florida and the tobacco companies amounts to an excise tax on smokers in all fifty states. Anyone for taxation without representation? By Hoover national fellow Daniel P. Kessler and former Hoover national fellow Jeremy Bulow.
Why “Faith-Based” Is Here to Stay
The broad shift in strategy for providing services
Reflections on the Recent Past: The Framers and Modern-Day Heresies
Former independent counsel Kenneth Starr reflects on the lessons to be learned from his investigation of the president.
Drug Decriminalization
Special Rerelease of the First Episode of Uncommon Knowledge, Twenty-One Years Later.
Drug Decriminalization
AUDIO ONLY
Special Rerelease of the First Episode of Uncommon Knowledge, Twenty-One Years Later

