Francis Fukuyama made the philosophy of history relevant again. Thirty years on, how does his most famous book hold up?
Justice Deferred usefully lays out the conventional wisdom of mainstream civil rights advocates. But it avoids the hard questions.
Will Title IX’s next fifty years be the best of times or the worst of times for women’s equality?
Many campuses have adopted political statements that employees and prospective employees are expected to affirm publicly.
Putin is using a terrible history in a disingenuous way to feed his obsession with "Ukrainian Nazis."
The real history of America's political pulpit defies simple categorization, but is essential to understanding our nation's past.
Rather than being reduced to race, age, class or sexual orientation, American literature is a messy, glorious, fantastic hodgepodge.
Is Willmoore Kendall's private life necessary to understand his public thought?
One precondition for restoring the originalist constitutional culture is convincing progressives of the merits of federalism.
We can learn something valuable by examining how the nation once taught children civic education.
To understand Justice Thomas's “liberal originalism," one must look to the Declaration of Independence.