Empire State Police State
Blog: Reason.com
Plus: Microaggression discourse, AI espionage, housing policy wins, and more...
2694 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Blog: Reason.com
Plus: Microaggression discourse, AI espionage, housing policy wins, and more...
Blog: Econbrowser
Today, ALEC released the latest assessment of state-by-state economic outlook and economic performance, authored by Arthur Laffer, Stephen Moore, and Jonathan Williams. I have documented the uselessness of the RSPS economic outlook indices here, and here. More recently, I used the RSPS rankings up through 2019 to predict state level GDP growth, comparing against the […]
Blog: Reason.com
Plus: Stormy's testimony, colleges posting bail, Optimus rising, RFK's brainworms, and more...
Blog: The Strategist
We need to address the elephants in the room. Yes, elephants. There are eight of them—each state and territory, and they are competing at the expense of improving Australia's innovation economy and strategic objectives. The ...
Blog: SmithEnvironment Blog
June 7, 2023 — In an unfortunate sequence of events, the U.S. Supreme Court has issued a decision significantly limiting federal Clean Water Act regulation of wetlands just as the N.C. General Assembly has been moving legislation to limit state water quality protection for wetlands. First, some background. Historically, states had the primary responsibility for protecting […]
Blog: Enlightened Europism
Introduction The reforms previously introduced aimed to construct a solid political and fiscal union upon enlightened ideological foundations (see Enlightened Europism), creating strong frames for the Republic of the United Europe (or RUE) to introduce a fair and just social system by redefining the role and authority of the state. The capitalist state – mainly […]
The post Reform #4: State appeared first on Enlightened Europism.
Blog: UCL Uncovering Politics
This week we're looking at a new way of thinking about the role of the state in our society: the idea of the 'precautionary state'. What is it? What are its implications? And is it a good thing?
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Following the Supreme Court's closely divided 2023 decision in National Pork Producers Council v. Ross, states continue to enact laws regulating animal conditions on farms located in other states. Constitutional or not, these laws are an aggressive and dubious extraterritorial use of state power.
Blog: Brown Center Chalkboard
The right to a free public K-12 education in the United States is enshrined in state constitutions. As a result, states play the lead role in K-12 education policy. For example, states determine how local public schools are funded (in large part, by providing significant funding to local districts), how educators are licensed to teach,…
Blog: Völkerrechtsblog
The post Law Beyond the State appeared first on Völkerrechtsblog.
Blog: ROAPE
ROAPE's Rama Salla Dieng writes that the current political crisis in Senegal is neither a symptom of 'democracy dying in Africa' nor the country being 'on the brink' as some headlines from the western media would have it. On the contrary, Dieng argues, this illusion does not hold when one considers the country's political history stained by state and police brutality and human rights violations since independence.
The post Resisting state brutality in Senegal appeared first on ROAPE.
Blog: Reason.com
Plus: Adderall shortages, infrastructure lessons, Kanye West, and more...
Blog: Reason.com
How Florida's legacy of slow-growth laws is holding back its post-COVID boom.
Blog: Verfassungsblog
On December 11, 2023, the Berlin Public Prosecutor's Office decided to discontinue investigations against Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian National Authority. The declared reason for doing so lies in his immunity pursuant to Section 20 para. 1 of the German Courts Constitution Act (GVG). The decision is instructive with regard to Germany's understanding of sovereign immunity and Palestine's role in international relations.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
By borrowing, legislators push the costs down the road for future legislators and taxpayers to deal with.