Journal of Libertarian Studies - 1982 V-06 I-03

The Journal of Libertarian Studies was founded by Murray N. Rothbard in 1977 and is the premiere venue for the advancement of libertarianism, anarcho-capitalism, the individualist society, and non-interventionism as the first principle of political theory and practice.

Editors and Editorial Board

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Gerard Postiglione

Significant opposition surrounded the development of state supported public secondary and higher education in New York State throughout the latter nineteenth century.

Joel H. Sibley

In a long editorial entitled “Let the People See,” which appeared in the New York Tribune in 1852, Horace Greeley, the great e

Richard Jensen

Although historians had long missed the importance of religion in American politics, it has recently become a central topic.

Tibor R. Machan

In his recent work, Tyranny and Legitimacy, James Fishkin advances an argument against Roben Nozick’s theory of, what Fishkin calls, “a

Carl Watner

The central ideas of contemporary libertarianism have taken many centuries to evolve.

Antony G. N. Flew

This paper is a consideration of whether there could be such universal and natural human rights, or whether such a suggestion is indeed “simp

Barry W. Poulson

Substantive due process refers to a judicial policy that substantively protects, under the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendmen

Morgan O. Reynolds

Economists have been relatively silent about the legislation from the 1930’s which supports unionism and collective bargaining in the United

Historian Alice Felt Tyler once used the expression “Freedom’s Ferment” to characterize the antebellum period in American history

Paul Kleppner

For generations, political historians used “the thought of the palace” to describe politics and party battles.

Justus D. Doenecke

The isolationist tradition in America, as it was manifested from 1939 to 1941, was based on two fundamental doctrines: avoidance of war in Europe and unimpaired freedom of action.