The Hobbesian Laboratory of the Middle East
Conceding that the American project of globalization has foundered, Robert Kaplan now places his hope in empire.
Conceding that the American project of globalization has foundered, Robert Kaplan now places his hope in empire.
The landscape for educational freedom is finally freed of nineteenth-century prejudices, but other federal constitutional questions remain.
One hundred years ago, J. Gresham Machen’s Christianity and Liberalism promoted school choice as the way to keep parents in charge of education.
After fifty years, The Gulag Archipelago can still rekindle the moral scruples essential to our humanity.
The response on American campuses to Hamas' brutality might prompt donors to seek reform. But what is the way forward?
Israel confronts hard truths that are half-forgotten in the sheltered West.
The powers of government to superintend civil society can sometimes be valid, but they should have clear, jealously guarded limits.
What is the citizen to think of European governments that cannot expel the most radical threats to public life?
For decades, civil rights agencies across government have largely ignored anti-Asian discrimination in education.
Despite what Michael Lind thinks, the American Founding is not a dead letter.