Anderson, Hazlitt, and the Quantity Theory of Money
It was Benjamin Anderson who injected in Hazlitt a radical distaste of inflationary policies and paper money.
Book Review of Benjamin Constant: Principles of Politics Applicable to All Governments
In this article, Gary Galles reviews Benjamin Constant’s Principles of Politics Applicable to All Governments.
Rejoinder to Caplan on Bayesian Economics
In the present article, it is my goal to critically comment on Caplan’s most recent argument.
Merchants of Death Revisited: Armaments, Bankers, and the First World War
The year 2004 marks the seventieth anniversary of the publication of Engelbrecht and Hanighen’s Merchants of Death: A Study of the Intern
Rothbard’s Time on the Left
Murray Rothbard devoted his life to the struggle for liberty, but, as anyone who has made a similar commitment realizes, it is never exactly clear
Editor’s Remarks
When Murray Rothbard founded the Journal of Libertarian Studies in 1977, publishing opportunities for libertarian scholarship, especially radical libertarian scholarship, were even rarer than they are today. Certainly the intellectual climate was beginning to improve. New books and conferences, along with the Nobel prizes for Friedrich A. Hayek and Milton Friedman, had all combined to give broadly libertarian approaches a higher academic profile. In Rothbard's vision, libertarianism represented not simply a set of policy proposals, but a wide ranging and diverse body of social theory articulating an integrated understanding of human agency and social interaction underlying such policy proposals. That's why it's the Journal of Libertarian Studies and not just the journal of libertarianism.