If an American-backed world order is to continue to do good in the world, it will require the recognition of other powers' legitimate spheres of influence.
Leonidas Zelmanovitz
Merit should be the only consideration in the college admission process.
Does the United States have a reasonable endgame in Ukraine?
The political turmoil in Brazil can be traced in large part to a powerful Supreme Court that has not earned the trust of the people.
Two hundred years after independence, Brazil still struggles to reap the full benefits of constitutional liberty.
Politics, Philosophy, and Economics programs are good examples of how to transmit the wisdom of Western civilization in the modern world.
Indexation helped Brazil cope with inflation until politicians' profligate ways were brought under control.
Everywhere you look, you can find radical opposition to the values of American society.
The representational theory of capital offers a more nuanced understanding of what capital is, and what role it plays in economic life.
LawMacro, as it is currently practiced, has unmeasured confidence in the ability of government to steer the economy.
In face of uncertainty, there is no wonder that some projects only move forward if the government is willing to subsidize them.
Considering two Roman legal maxims may help us navigate the crisis which has resulted from the coronavirus pandemic.
Proponents of the Green New Deal ask us for the sacrifices normally offered only in war.
As currently configured, it is likely to be rejected by those in charge of exercising the monetary prerogatives of sovereign governments.
Keynes’s famed biographer wants economic interventionism to make a comeback.
Leonidas Zelmanovitz, a fellow with the Liberty Fund, holds a law degree from the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil and an economics doctorate from the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Spain.