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The Power of Habeas Corpus in America THE POWER OF HABEAS CORPUS IN AMERICA: From the King’s Prerogative to the War on Terror
By Anthony Gregory

Despite its mystique as the greatest Anglo-American legal protection, habeas corpus's history features opportunistic power plays, political hypocrisy, ad hoc jurisprudence, and many failures in effectively securing individual liberty. The Power of Habeas Corpus in America tells the story of the writ from medieval England to modern America, crediting the rocky history to the writ's very nature as a government power.

Risky Business RISKY BUSINESS: Insurance Markets and Regulation
Edited by Lawrence S. Powell

Insurance regulation in the United States is at a crossroads. Market-based insurance should be celebrated for its innovation and competitiveness. Instead it is a constant target for politically motivated critics and politicians who excoriate the industry and call for ever-more regulation.

Crisis and Leviathan (25th Anniversary Edition) CRISIS AND LEVIATHAN (25TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION): Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government
By Robert Higgs

The size and scope of government power has grown in response to crises of war and economic upheavals. Such increased power remains long after each crisis passes, threatening both civil and economic liberties, all at the behest of special interest groups.

Boom and Bust Banking BOOM AND BUST BANKING: The Causes and Cures of the Great Recession
Edited by David Beckworth

Leading up to the late 2000s, The Federal Reserve played a critical role in creating a vast speculative housing bubble. Expansionary monetary policy formed the basis of soaring housing prices, excessive leverage, and mispricing of risk that characterized the Great Boom and created the conditions for the worst global recession in seventy years.

Priceless PRICELESS: Curing the Healthcare Crisis
By John C. Goodman

To cure the ailments of American healthcare we must get rid of the perverse incentives that raise costs, reduce quality, and make care hard to access. We must allow a free-market price system to emerge, so that the laws of supply and demand will work to the benefit of patients and providers alike.

Living Economics LIVING ECONOMICS: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
By Peter J. Boettke

Economics affects all walks of life and every human activity, whether in the marketplace, the voting booth, the church, or the family. It not only illuminates the world, but it also inspires us to cherish the voluntary institutions that bring humanity together.

Aquanomics AQUANOMICS: Water Markets and the Environment
Edited by B. Delworth Gardner, Randy T. Simmons

Historically, problems of water scarcity and pollution can be tied directly to government control over this vital resource. When the concepts of market-based solutions and property rights are applied, enormous ecological and economic benefits are possible.

Delusions of Power DELUSIONS OF POWER: New Explorations of the State, War, and Economy
By Robert Higgs

Many common assumptions about the U.S. government are not only false, they’re dangerous. Historical and theoretical misconceptions have spurred the growth of Big Government, encouraged U.S. entry into unnecessary wars, and invariably reduced the economic and civil liberties of ordinary Americans.

Financing Failure FINANCING FAILURE: A Century of Bailouts
By Vern P. McKinley

With information obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests, Vern McKinley disproves the claim that federal financial regulators and politicians prevented a more severe financial crisis and argues that reining in federal regulators is a necessary step toward truly promoting the safety and soundness of the financial system.

No War for Oil NO WAR FOR OIL: U.S. Dependency and the Middle East
By Ivan Eland

The grab for oil resources has been a major factor behind many conflicts and military deployments because of its perception as a strategic commodity. This book debunks the notion that oil is strategic and argues that war for oil is not necessary to secure the flow of petroleum.

Beyond Politics (Revised and Updated Edition) BEYOND POLITICS (REVISED AND UPDATED EDITION): The Roots of Government Failure
By Randy T. Simmons

Government intervention is frequently justified on the theory that “market failures” prevent the private sector and civil society from serving the “public good.” However, this pathbreaking book shows that “government failures” are far more common and harmful to society.

Good Money GOOD MONEY: Birmingham Button Makers, the Royal Mint, and the Beginnings of Modern Coinage, 1775-1821
By George Selgin

This fascinating story of British manufacturers’ challenge to the Crown’s monopoly on coinage illuminates the role of private enterprise and provides a noted historical lesson for entrepreneurs today.

The Enterprise of Law THE ENTERPRISE OF LAW: Justice Without the State
By Bruce L. Benson

The provision of justice and security has long been linked in most people’s minds to the state. To ask whether non-state institutions could deliver those services on their own, without the aid of coercive taxation and a monopoly franchise, runs the risk of branding one as a naïve anarchist or a dangerous radical.

The Civilian and the Military THE CIVILIAN AND THE MILITARY: A History of the American Antimilitarist Tradition
By Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr.

By elaborating on the role of the civilian and the military in American history up through the mid-twentieth century, the author helps us understand why the growing power and important of the armed forces over many aspects of nation and international policy is alarming for thoughtful citizens and policy makers today.

The Pursuit of Justice THE PURSUIT OF JUSTICE: Law and Economics of Legal Institutions
Edited by Edward J. López

How do decision makers in the law—judges, lawyers, juries, police, forensic experts, and more—respond to economic incentive structures? The authors review a range of rules and incentives which then sheds light on outcomes and reforms that would create a more just and efficient legal system.

Property Rights PROPERTY RIGHTS: Eminent Domain and Regulatory Takings Re-Examined
Edited by Bruce L. Benson

Property Rights explores the abuses of eminent domain and regulatory takings in terms of proposed constraints, compensation issues, a public choice perspective, and the spillover costs of takings. This comprehensive book brings together a diverse group of scholars and experts to explain the implications of these current issues.

Securing Civil Rights SECURING CIVIL RIGHTS: Freedmen, the Fourteenth Amendment, and the Right to Bear Arms
By Stephen P. Halbrook

What did it mean to take civil rights seriously—especially the “right to bear arms”—in the years following the abolition of slavery? By referencing historical sources of the time, constitutional scholar Halbrook shows that both supporters and opponents of the Fourteenth Amendment (1868) believed that it protected all Bill of Rights guarantees—especially the Second Amendment—from infringement by the states.

The New Holy Wars THE NEW HOLY WARS: Economic Religion vs. Environmental Religion in Contemporary America
By Robert H. Nelson

“Economics and environmentalism are types of modern religions.” So says author Robert H. Nelson in this analysis of the roots of economics and environmentalism and their mutually antagonistic relations in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Questions about the proper relationship between human beings and nature have led to the growth of these public theologies, or secular religions, even while both avoid mentioning their derivation from Western Judeo-Christian sources.

Housing America HOUSING AMERICA: Building Out of a Crisis
Edited by Randall G. Holcombe, Benjamin W. Powell

Although most housing in the United States is allocated in the private market, this market is heavily regulated and subsidized, with government policies dictating whether people can build, what type of housing is allowed, the terms allowed in financing and rental contracts, and much more. Involving the work of sixteen economists and policy experts, Housing America now critically examines government housing policies in the United States and how they impact housing at all levels.

Race and Liberty in America RACE AND LIBERTY IN AMERICA: The Essential Reader
Edited by Jonathan Bean

The history of civil rights in the United States is usually analyzed and interpreted through the lenses of modern conservatism or "progressive" liberalism. In Race and Liberty in America, Jonathan Bean argues that the historical record does not conveniently fit into either of these categories and that knowledge of the American classical liberal tradition is required to gain a more accurate understanding of the past, present, and future of civil rights in the nation.

Depression, War, and Cold War DEPRESSION, WAR, AND COLD WAR: Challenging the Myths of Conflict and Prosperity
By Robert Higgs

Depression, War, and Cold War offers a powerful, solidly grounded interpretation of U.S. political economy from the early-1930s to the end of the Cold War, and refutes many popular ideas about the Great Depression and New Deal, the World War II economy, and the postwar national-security state still so pervasive today.

The Decline of American Liberalism THE DECLINE OF AMERICAN LIBERALISM
By Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr.

In The Decline of American Liberalism, renowned historian Arthur Ekirch chronicles the powerful and moving story of individual liberty across three centuries of American history. Contrary to the conventional view that this de-humanization, immense expansion and centralization of government power, and decline in liberty are temporary or manifest some sort of “progress,” Ekirch believes that this change—“though hardly perceptible, often uneven, and occasionally reversed, is nevertheless a real descent.”

Partitioning for Peace PARTITIONING FOR PEACE: An Exit Strategy for Iraq
By Ivan Eland

Combining a history of Iraq and its dominant sects with an acute awareness of the political machinations fomenting worldwide, this keen military analysis offers a practical exit strategy for U.S. armed forces in Iraq. Ivan Eland explains why partitioning, a solution that has been successful in other chaotic political situations, can be a uniquely effective political and military exit strategy for a country like Iraq.

Recarving Rushmore RECARVING RUSHMORE: Ranking the Presidents on Peace, Prosperity, and Liberty
By Ivan Eland

Who were the best and worst U.S. presidents? Taking a distinctly new approach, Dr. Ivan Eland profiles each U.S. president on the merits of his policies and whether those strategies contributed to peace, prosperity, and liberty. This ranking system is based on how effective each president was in fulfilling his oath to uphold the Constitution.

Vietnam Rising VIETNAM RISING: Culture and Change in Asia’s Tiger Cub
By William Ratliff

Vietnam has emerged from poverty and isolation to become one of the fastest growing economies of Southeast Asia. Numerous pro-market reforms have helped spur foreign investment and domestic entrepreneurship.

The Founders’ Second Amendment THE FOUNDERS’ SECOND AMENDMENT: Origins of the Right to Bear Arms
By Stephen P. Halbrook

After decades of silence on the Second Amendment, the U.S. Supreme Court has presided over the case of District of Columbia vs. Heller. At issue is whether the Second Amendment protects a private citizen’s right to keep and bear arms. While much has been written about gun control and related issues, no book has delved so deeply into the nature of the right to keep and bear arms as it was understood and practiced during the first generation of the American Republic. Stephen Halbrook captures the intent of the Founders in their own words to reveal that the Second Amendment was indeed designed to protect the individual’s rights.

Lessons from the Poor LESSONS FROM THE POOR: Triumph of the Entrepreneurial Spirit
Edited by Alvaro Vargas Llosa

Half the people in the world live on two dollars or less per day and roughly 600 million live on no more than one dollar per day. With thousands of international relief organizations, strategic government programs, and billions of dollars in foreign aid, why do so many underdeveloped countries remain unable to grow their economies beyond mere survival?

The Empire Has No Clothes (Updated Edition) THE EMPIRE HAS NO CLOTHES (UPDATED EDITION): U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed
By Ivan Eland

Most Americans don’t think of their government as an empire, but in fact the United States has been steadily expanding its control of overseas territories since the turn of the twentieth century. Now, through political intimidation and more than 700 military bases worldwide, the U.S. holds sway over an area that dwarfs the great empires of world history. The author shows how empire building is contrary to both liberal and conservative principles and exposes the imperial motives of U.S. policy.

Twilight War TWILIGHT WAR: The Folly of U.S. Space Dominance
By Mike Moore

In Twilight War, Mike Moore argues that the U.S. merely provokes conflict when it circumvents treaties and presumes to station weapons of mass destruction in space. Rejecting treaty negotiations while further militarizing space renders America unable to lead by example. Moore concludes that instead of trying to stop an arms race in space by starting one, the U.S. must radically rethink its strategy.

Making Poor Nations Rich MAKING POOR NATIONS RICH: Entrepreneurship and the Process of Economic Development
Edited by Benjamin W. Powell

Why do some nations become rich while others remain poor? Making Poor Nations Rich demonstrates that pro-market reforms are essential to promoting the productive entrepreneurship that leads to economic growth, and where this institutional environment is lacking, sustained economic development will remain elusive.

Opposing the Crusader State OPPOSING THE CRUSADER STATE: Alternatives to Global Interventionism
Edited by Carl P. Close, Robert Higgs

For more than a century U.S. foreign policy has been based on the assumption that Americans’ interests are served best by intervening abroad. Before the twentieth century, however, a foreign policy of nonintervention was widely considered more desirable, and Washington’s and Jefferson’s advice that the republic avoid foreign entanglements was largely heeded.

Neither Liberty nor Safety NEITHER LIBERTY NOR SAFETY: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government
By Robert Higgs

Economist and historian Robert Higgs illustrates the false trade-off between freedom and security by showing how the U.S. government’s economic and military interventions have reduced the liberty, prosperity, and genuine security of all Americans.

Anarchy and the Law ANARCHY AND THE LAW: The Political Economy of Choice
Edited by Edward P. Stringham

Anarchy and the Law assembles for the first time in one volume the most important classic and contemporary studies exploring and debating non-state legal and political systems, especially involving the tradition of natural law and private contracts.

Electric Choices ELECTRIC CHOICES: Deregulation and the Future of Electric Power
Edited by Andrew N. Kleit

Can forces handle the delicate matter of transmitting electricity when the simple model of supply and demand must be more precise than other goods and services? How much regulation does the electric industry need? Electric Choices explores these difficult questions and proposes a new, market-based plan to improve America’s electrical future.

Street Smart STREET SMART: Competition, Entrepreneurship, and the Future of Roads
Edited by Gabriel Roth

Examines private, market-based alternatives for road services, both in theory and practice including at least four such possible directions for private services: testing and licensing vehicles and drivers; management of government-owned road facilities; franchising; and outright private ownership.

The Challenge of Liberty THE CHALLENGE OF LIBERTY: Classical Liberalism Today
Edited by Carl P. Close, Robert Higgs

The Challenge of Liberty restores the ideas and ideals of classical liberalism and shows how its contemporary exponents defend such pillars of free societies as individual rights, human dignity, market processes, and the rule of law.

The Che Guevara Myth THE CHE GUEVARA MYTH: And the Future of Liberty
By Alvaro Vargas Llosa

Nearly four decades after his death, the legend of Che Guevara has grown worldwide. With eyewitness accounts, Vargas Llosa sets the record straight regarding Che’s murderous legacy, brutally crushing any and all dissent, and concentrating wealth in the hands of an elite.

Judge and Jury JUDGE AND JURY: American Tort Law on Trial
By Eric A. Helland, Alexander Tabarrok

With inordinate amounts of money spent in the United States on lawyers and lawsuits and multibillion-dollar settlements growing each year, the very timely book Judge and Jury asks, “Is the tort system benefiting the public?”

Resurgence of the Warfare State RESURGENCE OF THE WARFARE STATE: The Crisis Since 9/11
By Robert Higgs

Resurgence of the Warfare State is Robert Higgs’s real-time analysis of the U.S. government’s tragic but predictable response to 9/11: the quick enactment of the USA PATRIOT Act, the federal takeover of airport security, the massive increase in defense and other government spending, and the carnage in Afghanistan and Iraq wrought by leaders unaccountable for their costly and deadly mistakes.

Plowshares & Pork Barrels PLOWSHARES & PORK BARRELS: The Political Economy of Agriculture
By Ernest C. Pasour Jr., Randal R. Rucker

Plowshares & Pork Barrels provides the historical and economic context necessary to make sense of U.S. agricultural policy and examines possible market-based alternatives that could benefit consumers and ensure the advancement of American agriculture in an increasingly interdependent global economy.

Re-Thinking Green RE-THINKING GREEN: Alternatives to Environmental Bureaucracy
Edited by Carl P. Close, Robert Higgs

Re-Thinking Green exposes the myths that have contributed to failed environmental policies and proposes bold alternatives that recognize the power of incentives and the limitations of political and regulatory processes. It addresses some of the most hotly debated environmental issues and shows how entrepreneurship and property rights can be utilized to promote environmental quality and economic growth.

Restoring Free Speech and Liberty on Campus RESTORING FREE SPEECH AND LIBERTY ON CAMPUS
By Donald A. Downs

Donald Downs addresses a major problem in contemporary American higher education: deprivations of free speech, due process, and other basic civil liberties in the name of favored political causes.

Liberty for Latin America LIBERTY FOR LATIN AMERICA: How to Undo Five Hundred Years of State Oppression
By Alvaro Vargas Llosa

In Liberty for Latin America, Alvaro Vargas Llosa offers an incisive diagnosis of Latin America’s woes—and a prescription for finally getting the region on the road to both genuine prosperity and the protection of human rights.

The Empire Has No Clothes THE EMPIRE HAS NO CLOTHES: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed
By Ivan Eland

The Empire Has No Clothes advocates a return to the Founding Fathers’ policy of military restraint overseas and argues that the concept of empire is contrary to the principles of both liberals and conservatives. Eland warns that in recent years, blowback from this overextended empire has begun to threaten the American homeland and curtail the very liberties and well-being U.S. interventions were supposed to protect.

Against Leviathan AGAINST LEVIATHAN: Government Power and a Free Society
By Robert Higgs

In Against Leviathan, economist and historian Robert Higgs offers an unflinching critical analysis of government power. Topics include Social Security, the paternalism of the FDA, the “War on Drugs,” the nature of political leadership, civil liberties, the conduct of the national surveillance state, and governmental responses to a continuing stream of “crises,” including domestic economic busts and foreign wars both hot and cold.

Drug War Crimes DRUG WAR CRIMES: The Consequences of Prohibition
By Jeffrey A. Miron

The “War on Drugs” claims thousands of lives every year in the United States. Each year, the U.S. government spends over $30 billion on the drug war and arrests 1.5 million American citizens on drug-related charges. There are now nearly half a million Americans imprisoned for drug offenses. The official claim is that drug prohibition deters drug use, reduces crime, and improves public health. But is this claim valid?

Faulty Towers FAULTY TOWERS: Tenure and the Structure of Higher Education
By Ryan C. Amacher, Roger E. Meiners

As debate accelerates over the declining standards in higher education, academic tenure is viewed with suspicion by many, who see it merely as job protection for incompetent teachers. Even many professors believe tenure is a guarantee of lifelong entitlement, whereby only the commission of a crime can lead to dismissal. Faulty Towers sets the record straight by elucidating the history, legal status, and common misunderstandings regarding tenure.

Reclaiming the American Revolution RECLAIMING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION: The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions and Their Legacy
By William J. Watkins Jr.

Thomas Jefferson and James Madison saw John Adams’ Alien and Sedition Acts as a threat to individual liberty and a precursor to federal government with unlimited power. The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions sought to return the nation to the tenets of the Constitution, in which rights for all were protected by checked federal power. Watkins examines this important and timeless controversy and demonstrates the Resolutions' crucial relevance to the major issues facing us today.

Changing the Guard CHANGING THE GUARD: Private Prisons and the Control of Crime
Edited by Alexander Tabarrok

Changing the Guard is an authoritative book on one of the most controversial aspects of criminal justice and corrections: the growing use of private prisons.

Strange Brew STRANGE BREW: Alcohol and Government Monopoly
By Douglas Glen Whitman

After Prohibition ended in 1933, many states passed laws regulating the sale of alcoholic beverages, now known as Franchise Termination Laws. Ostensibly intended to protect wholesalers from shady suppliers, and the public from the harmful effects of alcohol, these laws in fact created government-protected monopolies.

A Poverty of Reason A POVERTY OF REASON: Sustainable Development and Economic Growth
By Wilfred Beckerman

Oxford University economist Wilfred Beckerman puts “sustainable development” to the test, questioning several of its core claims: Will economic growth burn itself out by depleting the natural resources it requires? Will global warming wreak widespread havoc? Does human activity threaten to throw a delicate planet dangerously “out of balance”?

School Choices SCHOOL CHOICES: True and False
By John D. Merrifield

Economist John Merrifield shows that the school choice movement has become mired in false alternatives, petty distinctions, and diminished vision. Yet, he argues that the school choice program must not be allowed to fail like so many other government programs– a freely competitive market for education must remain the ultimate goal. School Choices charts a course for the achievement of this goal.

Entrepreneurial Economics ENTREPRENEURIAL ECONOMICS: Bright Ideas from the Dismal Science
Edited by Alexander Tabarrok

Entrepreneurial Economics is the best of applied economics with a twist of fun. Chapters in this stimulating book ingeniously apply simple economic principles to create new solutions to problems of genetic testing, patents, health and wealth insurance, legal gridlock, probation and parole, urban transit, the shortage of human organs and much more. An ideal way to really learn what economics is all about.

Market Failure or Success MARKET FAILURE OR SUCCESS: The New Debate
Edited by Tyler Cowen, Eric Crampton

Recent years have seen the rise of new theories of market failure based on asymmetric information (wherein one party in a transaction knows more than the other) and network effects (the more popular a product, the more valuable it becomes). According to this new paradigm, we would expect substantial failures in a variety of markets. But despite the new market-failure theories, no systematic critical examination has been available—until now.

The Voluntary City THE VOLUNTARY CITY: Choice, Community, and Civil Society
Edited by David T. Beito, Peter Gordon, Alexander Tabarrok

The Voluntary City assembles a rich history and analysis of private, locally based provision of social services, urban infrastructure, and community governance. Such systems have offered superior education, transportation, housing, crime control, recreation, health care, and employment by being more effective, innovative, and responsive than those provided through special interest politics and bureaucracy.

Liberty for Women LIBERTY FOR WOMEN: Freedom and Feminism in the Twenty-First Century
Edited by Wendy McElroy

Liberty for Women is an eye-opening book that vividly charts a new individualist feminism for the 21st century in a highly lucid, provocative, and inspiring way. “Choice” is the key, and every woman’s choices and expressions of self-ownership must be equally and legally respected, from housewives to CEOs. Only then can a meaningful debate arise over which choices may be the best ones for women to make freely.

American Health Care AMERICAN HEALTH CARE: Government, Market Processes and the Public Interest
Edited by Roger D. Feldman

A powerful book that examines why harmful consequences too often follow when government sets out to direct our health care systems. It contrasts government programs and private market alternatives for supplying health care services. Required reading for health policy-makers, economists, historians, and health care professionals.

Can Teachers Own Their Own Schools? CAN TEACHERS OWN THEIR OWN SCHOOLS?: New Strategies for Educational Excellence
By Richard K. Vedder

Economist Richard Vedder examines the economics, history and politics of education and shows how public schools could be radically improved by being privatized—through giving teachers a direct equity stake in the outcome of their services.

Cutting Green Tape CUTTING GREEN TAPE: Toxic Pollutants, Environmental Regulation and the Law
Edited by Roger E. Meiners, Richard L. Stroup

While multi-million dollar environmental lawsuits proliferate and Superfund has spent billions on hazardous waste cleanups, there appears little evidence of progress in cleaning up toxic threats to the environment. This book examines whether current regulation and policies benefit lawyers, bureaucrats and special interests diverting attention away from the real health and safety risks; creating disincentives for industry to safeguard against actual hazards.

Fire and Smoke FIRE AND SMOKE: Government, Lawsuits and the Rule of Law
By Michael I. Krauss

Fire and Smoke carefully examines so-called government “recoupment” lawsuits over firearms and tobacco and finds them to be flagrant abuses of the constitutional separation of powers, seriously undermining over two hundred years of common-law torts adjudication.

Writing Off Ideas WRITING OFF IDEAS: Taxation, Foundations, and Philanthropy in America
By Randall G. Holcombe

Tax-exempt foundations have grown tremendously in the late 20th century. They have moved away from improving the status of the less fortunate members of society to programs evaluating and changing public policy. Foundations use money earned by others to promote their own causes and ideas. Writing Off Ideas examines the relationship between America’s non-profit foundations and the tax law.

Hot Talk, Cold Science HOT TALK, COLD SCIENCE: Global Warming’s Unfinished Debate
By S. Fred Singer

Media reports often assert that global warming is real, imminent, and a threat to human life. But, have such predictions been established scientifically? Studies by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have been used (or misused) to call for extensive government controls to reduce fossil fuel use. Yet, the IPCC’s own report—and statements by leading scientists—indicate that the issue is far from settled.

Winners, Losers & Microsoft WINNERS, LOSERS & MICROSOFT: Competition and Antitrust in High Technology
By Stan J. Liebowitz, Stephen E. Margolis

Few issues in high technology are as divisive as the debate over competition, innovation, and antitrust. This book makes the case that free markets in high technology industry deliver better products to consumers, at lower prices, without government bureaucratic intervention.

Money and the Nation State MONEY AND THE NATION STATE: The Financial Revolution, Government and the World Monetary System
Edited by Kevin Dowd, Richard H. Timberlake, Jr.

Are the current structures of monetary and financial institutions in keeping with today’s economic realities? Money and the Nation State makes a strong case that long-overdue market-based reforms are necessary to overcome financial crises, economic stagnation and decline, and banking instability.

The Diversity Myth THE DIVERSITY MYTH: Multiculturalism and Political Intolerance on Campus
By David O. Sacks, Peter A. Thiel

A vivid, powerful exploration of the debilitating impact that politically-correct “multiculturalism” has had upon higher education and academic freedom in the United States.

To Serve and Protect TO SERVE AND PROTECT: Privatization and Community in Criminal Justice
By Bruce L. Benson

Government expenditures on police, courts, prisons, and other elements of the criminal justice system are at record levels. However, crime statistics show that our political-bureaucratic criminal justice system neither protects the innocent nor dispenses justice. To Serve and Protect analyzes private-sector alternatives that have the potential to reduce crime while offering greater protection of civil liberties.

The Capitalist Revolution in Latin America THE CAPITALIST REVOLUTION IN LATIN AMERICA
By Karen LaFollette Araujo, Paul Craig Roberts

State-dominated economies were once the norm throughout Latin America. Now, free market capitalism, deregulation, and privatization are driving rapid development and growth in nations like Chile, Argentina, and Mexico. This book is an insightful portrait of this turn-around and its implications for the United States.

Taxing Choice TAXING CHOICE: The Predatory Politics of Fiscal Discrimination
Edited by William F. Shughart II

Taxes, more than just a way for government to collect revenue, are also a powerful tool to coerce people to behave in politically correct ways. “Sin taxes” have been unsuccessful, as they have hindered economic progress and failed to deliver the promised social benefits. In addition, the costs of selective taxation fall disproportionately on lower income groups while politically powerful special interest groups benefit.

Private Rights and Public Illusions PRIVATE RIGHTS AND PUBLIC ILLUSIONS
By Tibor R. Machan

Private Rights and Public Illusions reveals that few problems concern most members of society in any uniform way, and contrary to conventional belief, both “public” and “private” realms are driven by the self-interests of those involved. Social problems have not only persisted despite massive government programs; such bureaucracies have produced even greater problems, undercut the private solutions of civil society, and given license to some individuals to misuse power over others.

Hazardous to Our Health? HAZARDOUS TO OUR HEALTH?: FDA Regulation of Health Care Products
Edited by Robert Higgs

Some have described the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a scientific bureaucracy with police powers. Does a “cult of infallibility” exist within the FDA, leading to decisions that are contrary to the best interests of patients and their physicians?

The Academy In Crisis THE ACADEMY IN CRISIS: The Political Economy of Higher Education
Edited by John W. Sommer

Government funding for higher education exploded after World War II and is at an all-time high. But who has really benefited from this flood of money? Have universities gained from increased government funding, or have they been corrupted?

That Every Man Be Armed THAT EVERY MAN BE ARMED: The Evolution of a Constitutional Right
By Stephen P. Halbrook

The power of firearms has stirred passions over the right of the citizenry to own and bear weapons throughout western civilization. Authored by the principal legal expert on the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, That Every Man Be Armed is the authoritative book on the ideas, history, and legal precedent that the citizen’s right to possess arms is as essential to democracy as is freedom of speech.

Beyond Politics BEYOND POLITICS: Markets, Welfare and the Failure of Bureaucracy
By William C. Mitchell, Randy T. Simmons

Government intervention is frequently justified on the theory that “market failures” prevent the private sector and civil society from serving the “public good.” However, this pathbreaking book shows that “government failures” are far more common and harmful to society.

Out of Work OUT OF WORK: Unemployment and Government in Twentieth-Century America
By Lowell E. Gallaway, Richard K. Vedder

Despite the best intentions, government programs to solve unemployment have not been successful. Instead, government at all levels actually worsens unemployment through poorly conceived and counterproductive approaches. Out of Work offers devastating evidence that the major cause of unemployment in the United States is the government itself.

Freedom, Feminism, and the State FREEDOM, FEMINISM, AND THE STATE
Edited by Wendy McElroy

Wendy McElroy draws a distinction between early feminists who supported the principles of the American Revolution and later scholars who favor a more activist government. The feminist movement began as a quest to rid women of governmental infringement upon their individual rights, but gradually evolved into advocates for a more intrusive state.

Taxing Energy TAXING ENERGY: Oil Severance Taxation and the Economy
By Robert T. Deacon, H. E. Frech, M. Bruce Johnson

Severance taxes on the extraction of oil, gas, and other natural resources are very popular with politicians because, since they are spread among a large, diffuse taxpayer base, they apear to be “invisible”. But do such taxes have serious negative consequences overlooked by legislators?

Agriculture and the State AGRICULTURE AND THE STATE: Market Processes and Bureaucracy
By Ernest C. Pasour Jr.

Despite record expenditures, government farming programs have not solved the “farm problem.” However, farm programs still command powerful political support. This book is a hard-hitting analysis of how farm programs have mainly benefitted large corporate farming interests at the expense of small farmers and the general public.

Alienation and the Soviet Economy ALIENATION AND THE SOVIET ECONOMY: The Collapse of the Socialist Era
By Paul Craig Roberts

The first edition of this seminal book in 1971 pointed out the fatal defects of Marxist theory that would lead to the collapse of the Soviet economy. In this revised edition, Paul Craig Roberts examines how reality triumphed over Marxist theory and the implications for the future of Russia and eastern Europe.

Antitrust and Monopoly ANTITRUST AND MONOPOLY: Anatomy of a Policy Failure
By Dominick T. Armentano

The stated purpose of antitrust laws is to protect competition and the public interest. But do such laws actually restrict the competitive process, harming consumers and serving the special interests of a few politically-connected competitors?

Arms, Politics, and the Economy ARMS, POLITICS, AND THE ECONOMY: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
Edited by Robert Higgs

The U. S. Department of Defense is actually one of the world’s largest planned economies. Like all planned economies, it has gross inefficiencies. This book is a penetrating analysis of the military-industrial-Congressional complex, and offers new insights into how meaningful reform can be achieved.

Regulation and the Reagan Era REGULATION AND THE REAGAN ERA: Politics, Bureaucracy and the Public Interest
Edited by Roger E. Meiners, Bruce Yandle

Was the so-called “Reagan Revolution” a disappointment regarding the federal systems of special-interest regulation? Many of that administration’s friends as well as its opponents think so. But under what criteria? To what extent? And why?

Crisis and Leviathan CRISIS AND LEVIATHAN: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government
By Robert Higgs

Crisis and Leviathan is one of the most important books ever written on the nature of government power. The book shows how and why the size and scope of government power has grown in response to crises of war and economic upheavals. Such increased power remains long after each crisis passes, threatening both civil and economic liberties, all at the behest of special interest groups.



Copyright 2013 The Independent Institute