Harold J. Laski: The Liberal Manque or Lost Libertarian?
A generation after his death in 1950, Harold Laski, the eminent political scientist, socialist, and British Labour Party leader, is almost forgotte
A generation after his death in 1950, Harold Laski, the eminent political scientist, socialist, and British Labour Party leader, is almost forgotte
Professor David Gordon gives his critique of John Hospers’ “Libertarianism and Legal Paternalism” paper published in The Journal
As the Marxian philosopher Louis Althusser used to put it, no reading is innocent.
This paper compares the work of two pioneers in the field of law and liberty: F. A. Hayek and his predecessor, Frédéric Bastiat.
Substantive due process refers to a judicial policy that substantively protects, under the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendmen
For generations, political historians used “the thought of the palace” to describe politics and party battles.
There are those to whom the question of whether to privatize the nation’s police forces is mere academic whimsy—a question of consequence only to t
This paper by Antoin E. Murphy reviews Richard Cantillion’s life and works.
Is there any “good” reason for a country such as the U.S.