Filter By:
Date
Topic
- Economic Policy (16) Apply Economic Policy filter
- Education (2) Apply Education filter
- Energy, Science & Technology (2) Apply Energy, Science & Technology filter
- Foreign Affairs & National Security (8) Apply Foreign Affairs & National Security filter
- Health Care (2) Apply Health Care filter
- History (31) Apply History filter
- Law (7) Apply Law filter
- US Politics (54) Apply US Politics filter
Type
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...
Policy Seminar with Arthur Brooks
Arthur Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), gave a talk on “Bringing America Back Together.” He started by arguing that the degree of polarization in America has reached unprecedented proportions. He suggested that institutions such as Hoover and AEI have an intellectual and moral responsibility to advocate the ideas on which they were formed. He believed that if such ideas were applied, the broad-based economic growth that would follow would take America away from the polarized situation it finds itself in right now.
Metropolitan Glory
John Julius Norwich is an earnest and somewhat stiff-backed editor...
Is Pornography the New Tobacco?
Another curious reversal in moralizing
Editorial
Adam Meyerson on the cultural contradictions of Clintonism
Literature in Theory
Peter Berkowitz on Theory’s Empire: An Anthology of Dissent edited by Daphne Patai and Will H. Corral
Douglas Murray And His Continuing Fight Against The "Madness Of Crowds”
TRANSCRIPT ONLY
A little over 18 months ago, we interviewed author and columnist Douglas Murray about his then new book The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity. That show was one of our most-watched interviews of 2019, so we thought it was time to sit down with Douglas again and get an update on where things stand with regard to, as Douglas describes in his book, “the interpretation of the world through the lens of ‘social justice,’ ‘identity group politics’ and ‘intersectionalism’ . . . the most audacious and comprehensive effort since the end of the Cold War at creating a new ideology.”
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
Strong Society, Weak State
The social dimension of state-building.
Pages
- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4

