Big Government

Displaying 1801 - 1810 of 3187
Bertrand Lemennicier

The theory of the emergence of the State both in public choice literature and in neoclassical economics assumes that social interaction is prone to

Tibor R. Machan

Walter Block has penned a response to my paper in which I argue that there isn’t much more than a verbal difference between limited government (min

Murray N. Rothbard

In this article, Murray N, Rothbard discusses Lysander Spooner and Benjamin R. Tucker's anti-State doctrine and how it affected his ideological development.

Josef Šíma

Since the end of the Second World War, the issue of European integration has taken on ever-greater economic and political importance.

Jacob H. Huebert

n this article, J.H. Huebert reviews Randy E. Barnett’s Restoring the Lost Constitution: The Presumption of Liberty.

Laurence M. Vance

In the Kelo decision, the city of New London, Connecticut, exercised the power of eminent domain to seize the private property of Susette Kelo and

Carl Watner

The classic definition of the State involves two elements: a coercive monopolization of defense services over a given geographic area, and the impo

Walter Block

Given Dwight Lee’s stalwart free enterprise credentials, it is more than passingly curious that the title of his 1998 Presidential Address to the S

Philipp Bagus

According to many economists we need the state to provide public goods.