Mises Review, now online, is a quarterly review of the literature in economics, politics, philosophy, and law. Edited by David Gordon.
Libertarian Anarchy: Against the State, by Gerard Casey
Libertarian Anarchy would have delighted Murray Rothbard. In this book, a distinguished Irish philosopher defends forcefully and eloquently Rothbardian anarchism.
How Much Is Enough? Money and the Good Life, by Robert Skidelsky and Edward Skidelsky
Robert Skidelsky is best known for his three-volume biography of Lord Keynes, and his son Edward is a philosopher who has written an excellent book on Ernst Cassirer.
The War on Drugs Is a War on Freedom, by Laurence M. Vance
The efforts, spurred by Mayor Bloomberg, to ban large cans of drinks deemed too sugary have been much in the news lately; and a peculiar point in the mayor's defense of this measure is highly relevant to Laurence Vance's excellent book.
Libertarianism: What Everyone Needs to Know, by Jason Brennan
Jason Brennan, an outstanding libertarian political philosopher who teaches at Georgetown University, has written Libertarianism as an introductory guide, and much of the material in it will be familiar to readers of
Understanding Liberal Democracy: Essays in Political Philosophy, by Nicholas Wolterstorff
Most contemporary political philosophers, unfortunately, are not libertarians. Nicholas Wolterstorff, best known as a founder of "reformed epistemology" but a philosopher of extraordinary range, is no libertarian either — far from it.
The Financial Crisis and the Free Market Cure: Why Pure Capitalism Is the World Economy’s Only Hope, by John A. Allison
This book contains the oddest sentence I have ever read about the current financial crisis, or for that matter about any financial crisis.
Robert Nozick, by Ralf M. Bader
Ralf Bader has given us an excellent guidebook to Anarchy, State, and Utopia, but he has done much more than this.
Universally Preferable Behavior: A Rational Proof for Secular Ethics, by Stephan Molyneux
Stefan Molyneux is a popular libertarian broadcaster who has in recent years acquired a considerable following. In Universally Preferable Behavior, he takes on an ambitious task.
American Empire: A Debate, by Christopher Layne and Bradley A. Thayer
Christopher Layne and Bradley Thayer both specialize in international-relations theory, in particular what they term "grand strategy," but they hold very different views on what foreign policy the United States ought to pursue.
Herbert Butterfield: History, Providence, and Skeptical Politics, by Kenneth B. McIntyre
Kenneth McIntyre has given us a deeply thoughtful and erudite account of one of the greatest 20th-century historians, Hebert Butterfield. I should like to concentrate on an aspect of Butterfield's thought likely to be of
The DIM Hypothesis: Why the Lights of the West Are Going Out, by Leonard Peikoff
Whatever the failings of this book, its author has a sense of humor. Peikoff writes of his unusual name for his main hypothesis,
End This Depression Now!, by Paul Krugman
Supporters of Keynesian economics sometimes claim it to be a crude caricature of the Master that he thought the government has only to spend more money to get us out of a depression and that getting us into debt doesn't
Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly Wrong, by Thomas Nagel
To review Thomas Nagel's new book for the Mises Daily seems at first sight a misplaced endeavor. The book has nothing to say about libertarianism or Austrian economics;
The Harm in Hate Speech, by Jeremy Waldron
In many countries, though not in the United States, laws prohibit "hate speech." Those who, in Jeremy Waldron's opinion, uncritically elevate the benefits of free speech over competing values oppose hate-speech laws.
The Darwin Economy: Liberty, Competition, and the Common Good, by Robert H. Frant
A specter is haunting Robert Frank's latest book — the specter of libertarianism. For him, it is a doctrinaire view with little to recommend it; yet he again and again seems drawn both to try to refute it and to deflect it.
Organized Crime: The Unvarnished Truth About Government, by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
Thomas DiLorenzo is probably best known to the public for his revisionist studies of Lincoln, but he has a wide range of economic and historical interests.
Is the Market a Test of Truth and Beauty?: Essays in Political Economy, by Leland B. Yeager
Although Leland Yeager calls himself a fellow traveler of the Austrian School, rather than a full-fledged member of it — he is a fellow traveler of the Chicago School as well — no reader of his essays can fail to note one
The Rule of Law and the Measure of Property,by Jeremy Waldron
Classical liberals like Friedrich Hayek and Richard Epstein have often claimed that the rule of law imposes strong constraints on the state's regulation of private property.
Living Economics: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow, by Peter J. Boettke
This notable book collects twenty-two articles by Peter Boettke; eight of these have been written in collaboration with others, including Peter Leeson, Christopher Coyne, Steve Horwitz, David Prychitko, and Frederic Sautet.
Free Market Fairness, by John Tomasi
To write about bleeding-heart libertarianism is no easy task. Self-professed bleeding-heart libertarians, who include well-known political philosophers, now run their own website, and the movement has aroused among libertarians