Constitutionalism
May 21, 2026

Struck By Lightning Fifty Years Later: The Court’s Broken Promise on the Death Penalty

The Supreme Court has become the source of the very arbitrariness it set out to eliminate.

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Constitutionalism
May 21, 2026

The Curse of 'Penn Central'

A Supreme Court that has undone Roe v. Wade and Chevron should be willing to remove the curse of Penn Central.

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Economic Dynamism
May 21, 2026

Proxy Advisors Vote “No” on Texas

The problem for the proxy advisory firms is that the corporate march to the Lone Star State won’t end with Exxon.

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The Future of ESG and DEI

Politics
May 20, 2026
The Future of ESG and DEI

Mamdani’s Baseless Invocation of International Law

Politics
May 19, 2026
Mamdani’s Baseless Invocation of International Law

The Demons in Democracy

Politics
May 19, 2026
The Demons in Democracy
Constitutionalism
May 15, 2026

Colorado's Latest Secularist Gambit

Tal Fortgang discusses Colorado's apparent hostility toward religious groups.

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The Curse of 'Penn Central'

A Supreme Court that has undone Roe v. Wade and Chevron should be willing to remove the curse of Penn Central.

Richard Epstein
May 21, 2026
Proxy Advisors Vote “No” on Texas

The problem for the proxy advisory firms is that the corporate march to the Lone Star State won’t end with Exxon.

Michael Toth
May 21, 2026
The Future of ESG and DEI

Though things will likely not become as radical as the Covid hysteria of 2020 and 2021, there is still plenty of institutional “muscle memory” for ESG that will make its re-emergence all too easy.

Paul Mueller
May 20, 2026
Mamdani’s Baseless Invocation of International Law

The entire left-wing establishment is completely defenseless against Mamdani’s invocations of international law and the vague insinuation that Zionist Jews are doing something wrong.

Tal Fortgang
May 19, 2026
The Demons in Democracy

There is no guarantee for our Republic’s survival.

May 19, 2026
What Happiness Ought We Pursue? Natural Rights and the Declaration of Independence

Freedom points beyond itself to a moral life of deliberate conformity to the moral laws of nature and the will of God.

May 19, 2026
Pursuing the Right to the Pursuit of Happiness in the Twenty-First Century

The Declaration is not a historical argument — it is a philosophical one, a claim about what human nature requires, not merely about what was once practiced or understood.

May 19, 2026
Lives Entwined in the Great Stock Market Collapse

It is highly unlikely that we in the present are any smarter than the characters caught in the great drama of a century ago.

Alex J. Pollock
May 14, 2026
The Keynes Symposium

Assessing Keynes' General Theory on Employment, Interest, and Money at 90.

Richard Epstein, Jonathan Hartley, Michael Munger, Veronique de Rugy, Leonidas Zelmanowitz
May 13, 2026
What SpaceX’s IPO Tells Us About American Capital Markets

The ultimate trajectory of SpaceX remains uncertain, a reflection of the inherent nature of progress at the frontier rather than a flaw in the system that produced it.

Julia R. Cartwright
May 6, 2026
Chicago’s “Disappearing Middle Class” Can Be Found in Its Proliferating Upper Middle-Class Neighborhoods

The middle class has not been hollowed out; rather, the overall decline stems from the net movement of families upward into the upper-middle class.

Scott Winship
Apr 30, 2026
Is Economics a Failure?

Rather than ending with “economics is broken,” Alexander Rosenberg’s deliberately provocative book 'Blunt Instrument' argues that “economics is useful for a different reason than economists often say.” That is a serious and worthwhile thesis.

Michael Munger
Apr 16, 2026
Locke, Meet Claude

The concern is not regulation per se. It is a regulation that outruns its justification by arriving before the evidence, foreclosing the technology before its benefits are understood, and insulating the powerful from competition that would otherwise discipline them. That is the pattern worth resisting. 

Kevin Frazier
Apr 15, 2026
Is There Anything New Under the AI Sun?

OpenAI needs to build on the successes of open markets and turn away from regulation, taxation, and cartelization.

Richard Epstein
Apr 15, 2026
Mamdani’s Baseless Invocation of International Law

The entire left-wing establishment is completely defenseless against Mamdani’s invocations of international law and the vague insinuation that Zionist Jews are doing something wrong.

Tal Fortgang
May 19, 2026
The Demons in Democracy

There is no guarantee for our Republic’s survival.

May 19, 2026
Losing—and Recovering—Our Religion

America's flagship universities are producing graduates who cannot comprehend their own civilization.

Jason Bedrick
May 18, 2026
A Permission Structure for Violence

It is not enough to personally eschew violence. As a society, we must condemn and punish it as well, wherever it comes.‍

Tevi Troy
May 15, 2026
Xi Can't Have Taiwan

Taiwanese history is not easily distilled, making it ripe for the CCP to manipulate in support of its goal to annex the island.

Anne Lord
May 15, 2026
The Declaration and the American Self-Governing Spirit

Spalding clearly reads the Declaration as a high-minded document, rich in philosophical content and brimming with noble purpose.

Rachel Lu
May 14, 2026
The End of the AI Binary

Being pro-AI does not require being pro-recklessness. It means building the conditions for AI to be deployed widely and quickly while permitting core institutions to keep pace.

Kevin Frazier
May 12, 2026
The Curse of 'Penn Central'

A Supreme Court that has undone Roe v. Wade and Chevron should be willing to remove the curse of Penn Central.

Richard Epstein
May 21, 2026
What Happiness Ought We Pursue? Natural Rights and the Declaration of Independence

Freedom points beyond itself to a moral life of deliberate conformity to the moral laws of nature and the will of God.

May 19, 2026
Pursuing the Right to the Pursuit of Happiness in the Twenty-First Century

The Declaration is not a historical argument — it is a philosophical one, a claim about what human nature requires, not merely about what was once practiced or understood.

May 19, 2026
The Supreme Court Was Right to Ban Race-Based Gerrymandering

Citizens should be represented in their government as individuals, rather than as members of pre-selected groups based on race or ethnicity. ​

David Lewis Schaefer
May 18, 2026
One Toke Over the Line

Blanche exceeded the statutory authority he has under the Controlled Substances Act.

Paul J. Larkin
May 14, 2026
The “Science Charade” After 'Chevron'

Like most complex systems, the administrative state resists easy answers.

Aaron L. Nielson
May 12, 2026
The Firestorm Over Congressional Redistricting

In the end, the Court will enter the political thicket through a side door that never should have been left open in the first place.

Richard Epstein
May 8, 2026
Why Humans Aren’t Clever Chimps

Why has primatology pushed the human-chimp connection?

Ronald W. Dworkin
Apr 24, 2026
“Project Hail Mary’s” Success: A Story You Can Believe In

The film features a weak, defeated man who turns from a coward to a hero, from selfishness to sacrifice, and from loneliness to friendship.

Titus Techera
Apr 17, 2026
Is America Good Enough for Wendell Berry?

Genuine traditions and stories can prevent their inheritors from recklessly chasing the future simply because it’s the next thing.

Brian Smith
Apr 10, 2026
Rediscovering History as the Story of Liberty

History can be a way to center ourselves today and renew the institutions and beliefs that are central to that history and its legacy.

Arthur Herman
Apr 9, 2026
James Q. Wilson and the Crisis of Our Time

"When we profess to believe in deterrence and to value justice, but refuse to spend the energy and money required to produce either, we are sending a clear signal that we think that safe streets, unlike all other great public goods, can be had on the cheap."

Titus Techera
Apr 8, 2026
Welcome to the Manosphere

What counter-programming might resonate, reaching young men with the message that unhealthy conspiracism and cartoonish machismo need not be a part of a healthy striver mentality?

Tal Fortgang
Apr 3, 2026
Celebrating Passover in Communist Exile

When we children found out the name of our feast, we had already crossed the big sea, eaten lots of bread dipped in sour milk, and the bitter herbs were beginning to taste quite sweet.

Juliana Geran Pilon
Apr 1, 2026

Symposia

The Keynes Symposium

Symposium on Associate Justice Clarence Thomas’s Remarks on the Declaration of Independence

The Healthcare Symposium

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Eight weeks after Operation Epic Fury, the crisis in Iran has reached no definitive end.
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Regulatory Fourtnight by Aaron Nielson

A new column featuring Aaron Nielson’s analysis of leading cases and developments in federal and Texas law.

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Civitas Outlook
The Curse of 'Penn Central'

A Supreme Court that has undone Roe v. Wade and Chevron should be willing to remove the curse of Penn Central.

Civitas Outlook
Struck By Lightning Fifty Years Later: The Court’s Broken Promise on the Death Penalty

The Supreme Court has become the source of the very arbitrariness it set out to eliminate.

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