Freest in the 50 States: A Discussion with New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu

The Cato Institute

Please join us for a virtual policy conversation with Chris Sununu, the governor of New Hampshire. In the past two years, Governor Sununu and the State of New Hampshire have topped Cato’s rankings for both our Fiscal Policy Report Card on America’s Governors and our recently released Freedom in the 50 States report. The online […]

Freest in the 50 States: A Discussion with New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu

The Cato Institute

Please join us for a virtual policy conversation with Chris Sununu, the governor of New Hampshire. In the past two years, Governor Sununu and the State of New Hampshire have topped Cato’s rankings for both our Fiscal Policy Report Card on America’s Governors and our recently released Freedom in the 50 States report. The online […]

The China Initiative: Origins and Consequences

The Cato Institute

On September 9, 2021, federal judge Thomas A. Varlan acquitted former University of Tennessee professor Dr. Anming Hu of all charges related to a Department of Justice investigation that alleged that Hu committed wire fraud and made false statements about his alleged Chinese government research ties. On November 5, 2021, a federal jury convicted Yanjun […]

Cato Surveillance Conference 2021

The Cato Institute

Americans in the age of COVID-19 are relying more than ever on digital networks to work, socialize, and learn—which makes safeguarding the privacy and security of those networks even more essential. The 2021 Cato Surveillance Conference brings together an outstanding lineup of academics, technologists, policymakers, and privacy advocates to discuss the most pressing topics in […]

Congress and War: Reclaiming Article I Powers

The Cato Institute

In the wake of the Vietnam War, Congress passed two historic pieces of legislation that were designed to constrain the executive branch’s seemingly unilateral war‐​making abilities. The War Powers Resolution of 1973 and the Arms Export Control Act of 1976, in theory, provide Congress with the ability to restrain presidents from waging war and selling […]

Constructing a Crypto Regulatory Framework: Banking Regulation

The Cato Institute

Cryptocurrency regulation sits at the intersection of multiple regulatory regimes: financial markets regulators and banking regulators, among many others, have asserted authority over certain aspects of crypto regulation, which has resulted in an overlapping and incomplete regulatory framework that has drawn criticism from both proponents and skeptics of crypto innovation. So, how is cryptocurrency regulated? […]

The Politics Industry: How Political Innovation Can Break Partisan Gridlock and Save Our Democracy

The Cato Institute

Political polarization and dysfunction are more than just the byproducts of a bad national mood. They emerge in large part from the legal and institutional machinery of politics and elections, shaped over the years by those on both sides of the ideological divide. America has repeatedly managed to escape earlier periods of factional antipathy, insider […]

39th Annual Monetary Conference: Populism and the Future of the Fed

The Cato Institute

Cato’s 39th Annual Monetary Conference—Populism and the Future of the Fed—will bring together leading scholars and policymakers to explore the risks that populism poses to the conduct of monetary policy. As the bright line between monetary and fiscal policy fades, and the threat of fiscal dominance increases, a robust discussion of the Fed’s future is […]

A Right to Lie? Presidents, Other Liars, and the First Amendment

The Cato Institute

Do the nation’s highest officers, including the president, have a right to lie, no matter what damage their falsehoods cause? Does freedom of expression protect falsehoods? If so, are lies by candidates and public officials protected? And is there a constitutional path, without violating the First Amendment, to stop a president whose persistent lies endanger […]

Nixon’s War at Home: The FBI, Leftist Guerrillas, and the Origins of Counterterrorism

The Cato Institute

Domestic terrorism has been a part of the American political landscape since the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in the Civil War’s aftermath. During the turbulent transformation of American society during the 1960s and 1970s, a new kind of domestic terrorism threat emerged. Homegrown leftist guerrilla groups, such as the Weather Underground and the […]

Benefits and Prospects of Free Trade in Environmental Goods

The Cato Institute

In 2014, the United States and 17 other countries began negotiations at the World Trade Organization (WTO) to create an Environmental Goods Agreement (EGA). The aim of these talks was to remove or reduce tariffs on important environmentally friendly products such as wind turbines, solar panels, and energy‐​efficient technology. An EGA would allow for freer […]

The Origins of Human Progress

The Cato Institute

What explains the explosion in growth and prosperity that humanity has experienced in the past couple centuries? Why did that process take root more readily in some places than in others, and how can its spread be encouraged? Professors Deirdre McCloskey and Stephen Haber will provide separate accounts. McCloskey will contest standard economic explanations and […]

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