News

In an exclusive interview with Lib​er​tar​i​an​ism​.org, James Tooley revisits his extensive research on education in the ...
Jackson’s message looms large in the libertarian memory of early American history, but how often do we stop to interrogate his motivations?
Prosperity and property rights are inextricably linked. The importance of having well-defined and strongly protected property rights is now widely recognized among economists and policymakers. A ...
Crypto- anarchism is a philosophy whose advocates think technology can assist them in creating communities based on consent rather than coercion.
Why such a contradiction? Because he is frequently used as a boogeyman to be trotted out against “do- nothing- ism” when a crisis emerges. Depicted as a passive actor with regard to both the onset of ...
Mussolini attempted to remake the Italian mind, taking a personal interest in applying the twin tools of censorship and propaganda.
Smith discusses the utilitarianism of Jeremy Bentham and why it so alarmed the defenders of natural rights.
Smith discusses Jefferson’s ideas about education and his plan for a decentralized system of public schools.
A libertarian world won’t eliminate all poverty, but it offers powerful tools for greatly reducing it, and improving the lives of the poorest and least privileged.
Opposition to war was a recurring theme in Aristophanes’s plays, especially Acharnians and Lysistrata.
Smith explains Kant’s basic justification of government and why he opposed the rights of resistance and revolution.
Did Adam Smith—celebrated hero of free trade—make a big exception for reasons of national defense? Would he support the Jones Act of today? Caleb Petitt argues that a careful reading of Smith on the ...