Historically, the legal order of England prioritized prudence and gradualism over fanaticism and ideology.
Everywhere you look, you can find radical opposition to the values of American society.
Nixon’s election was traumatic for the establishment because he was not one of them.
Bastiat's blend of economics and theistic liberalism can support freedom, justice, and enduring prosperity.
Cultural extinction is the norm. What shall we make of the exceptions?
In his nods to complexity, Hazony shows that he's not as different from fusionists as he claims.
Hazony's book on the conservative tradition is part rediscovery and part invention.
Yoram Hazony's book is a welcome and noble failure.
The financial and political choices that leaders make during wars have consequences for the lives and liberties of their people long after the war.
Fukuyama stayed too much within the parameters of modern thoughts and hopes, unwilling to step outside them to take their measure.
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?