A new documentary recounts the history of religious freedom in our country from colonial times until today.
Essays
Honest, critical writing from leading scholars and policy experts commenting on the role of law, politics, and culture in society.
Recent
Argentina has the opportunity to rid itself of its omnipresent state. But such massive changes require long-term thinking.
We need to rethink how K-12 interlinks with undergraduate education and how undergraduate education interlinks with professional training.
Liberal thinkers used to be quite interested in this endeavor.
The media’s account of the Alabama Supreme Court’s opinion in LePage misrepresented it as an attack on IVF.
Can state courts resist the pressure to become a refuge for political activism?
Remarkably, modern progressives have found a way to be moral relativists and intolerant absolutists at the same time.
Market transactions may seem mundane or even base, but free enterprise supports higher forms of excellence along with material prosperity.
Dune: Part Two contains conservative truths about human nature and the fate of political faiths.
A newsletter worth reading.
Among many unfair attacks on Mormons in the nineteenth century, slavery apologist George Fitzhugh’s was distinctive.
Teaching constitutional law is no more difficult now than it’s ever been—unless you sacralize the Warren Court.
The only way to change the university’s direction is strong leadership from the top, and that doesn’t appear likely.
Slow Horses is a spy thriller worthy of Gordon Tullock.
Academia has become intellectually stagnant, but it might help to revive the Devil's Advocate as a pedagogical tool.
A two-state solution in the foreseeable future is at best dubious and at worst delusional.