May - June 2001
By Dennis T. Avery | May 1, 2001
By James C. Bennett | May 1, 2001
Gurcharan Das, India Unbound (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2001), 406 pages, $27.50
By Ronald W. Dworkin | May 1, 2001
Sally Satel, P.C., M.D.: How Political Correctness Is Corrupting Medicine (Basic Books), 256 pages, $21.60
By James R. Edwards, Jr. | May 1, 2001
By Joseph Epstein | May 1, 2001
By Michael Fumento | May 1, 2001
By William Gale | May 1, 2001
Changes in federal budget rules would clarify the cases for and against tax cuts and increases in government spending.
By Jason Hutchens | May 1, 2001
By S. T. Karnick | May 1, 2001
By George Keyworth II | May 1, 2001
The digital age is diminishing the role of nuclear weapons. So what's next?
By Dave Kopel | May 1, 2001
Recent police department scandals are a result of increased federal involvement and racial hiring practices.
By Mike Krause | May 1, 2001
Recent police department scandals are a result of increased federal involvement and racial hiring practices.
By Herbert I. London | May 1, 2001
By Herbert I. London | May 1, 2001
The once-majestic cities of the Baltic region have fallen prey to economic leveling and social decay. Recovery will require great cultural changes.
By Kathryn Jean Lopez | May 1, 2001
The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World Is Still the Least Valued, by Ann Crittenden (Metropolitan Books), 323 pages, $25.00
By Richard Lugar | May 1, 2001
By Edmund McGarrell | May 1, 2001
As prison populations swell, prisoner reentry programs can be an effective remedy for overcrowded prisons and an undercrowded labor force.
By Stephen Moore | May 1, 2001
How Washington created an economic downturn, and how we can recover from it.
By Ernest Preeg | May 1, 2001
International trade is good for American workers.
By Alan Reynolds | May 1, 2001
There's nothing wrong with America's economy that the Fed can't fix
By Nicholas Rhoad | May 1, 2001
By Edwin S. Rubenstein | May 1, 2001
Despite the worries of some economists, America's record foreign debt is no threat to the nation's economic well-being.
By Debra Slivka | May 1, 2001
Postmodern architecture reflects the confusion, pluralism, and instability of today's society.