Hayek Program Podcast
Ein Podcast von F.A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics - Mittwochs
212 Folgen
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Women and Policy — Why Is Childcare so Expensive?
Vom: 18.9.2024 -
Nathan Goodman and Anthony Gregory on “New Deal Law and Order”
Vom: 4.9.2024 -
Environmental Economics — Militarized Climate Planning: What is Left?
Vom: 21.8.2024 -
Environmental Economics — Why You Should Live in the City
Vom: 7.8.2024 -
Healthcare — Matt Mitchell on Certificates of Need
Vom: 24.7.2024 -
Peter Boettke & Chris Coyne on How to Run Wars
Vom: 10.7.2024 -
Entangled Political Economy — David Hebert on Public Finance and Political Parties
Vom: 26.6.2024 -
"The Struggle for a Better World" Book Panel
Vom: 12.6.2024 -
Entangled Political Economy — Richard Wagner on the Origins of EPE
Vom: 29.5.2024 -
"Living Better Together" — On Culture and Economics
Vom: 15.5.2024 -
"Freedoms Delayed" Book Panel
Vom: 1.5.2024 -
"Living Better Together" — On Community Resilience
Vom: 17.4.2024 -
Peter Boettke & David Beito on the New Deal's War on the Bill of Rights
Vom: 3.4.2024 -
"Living Better Together" — On Women and the Family
Vom: 20.3.2024 -
Environmental Economics — Governing the Global Fisheries Commons
Vom: 6.3.2024 -
"Better Money: Gold, Fiat, or Bitcoin?" Book Panel
Vom: 21.2.2024 -
Mikayla Novak & Seth Kaplan on Fragile Neighborhoods
Vom: 7.2.2024 -
"In Search of Monsters to Destroy" Book Panel
Vom: 24.1.2024 -
Peter Boettke & Bryan Cheang on Unveiling Liberalism in Southeast Asia
Vom: 10.1.2024 -
"Living Together: Inventing Moral Science" Book Panel
Vom: 27.12.2023
The Hayek Program Podcast includes audio from lectures, interviews, and discussions of scholars and visitors from the F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. The F. A. Hayek Program is devoted to the promotion of teaching and research on the institutional arrangements that are suitable for the support of free and prosperous societies. Implicit in this statement is the presumption that those arrangements are to some extent open to conscious selection, as well as the appreciation that the type of arrangements that are selected within a society can influence significantly the economic, political, and moral character of that society.
