Faculty Research & Public Works

The School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership’s faculty members are bringing classroom learning to life through research and authorship of independent work, contributions to academic journals, public speaking, and much more. Additionally, many of our faculty contribute to work through the school’s two affiliated research centers. Explore the depth and breadth of our faculty’s most recent publications and ongoing research below.

Faculty Research

Prohibition, the Constitution, and States' Rights

Book publication

It's a political and constitutional history of Prohibition, showing how Americans took constitutional debate and federalism seriously through intense discussion of constitutional amendments and constitutional obligations.

"The Entrepreneur"

Published Research

The essay provides a Christian theological framework for thinking about entrepreneurial activity.

Why Libertarians Should Read Frank Knight

Guest Commentary

An introduction to Frank Knight's work for libertarians.

Review of The Economics Book: From Xenophon to Cryptocurrency, 250 Milestones in the History of Economics, by Steven G. Medema

Book review

What would you put on your list of the top 250 “milestones” in the history of economics? Medema, a leading historian of economics, provides his list in a coffee-table book accessible to a wide audience. 

Revisiting Frank H. Knight's 'The Ethics of Competition'

Academic Paper

James M. Buchanan revisited his mentor’s famous 1923 essay “The Ethics of Competition” in an essay written for the centenary celebration of Frank Knight’s birth in 1985.

Some Notes on the Chicago School of Economics and Economic Liberty

Research Note

Based on a forthcoming article in the Encyclopedia of Libertarianism, edited by Matt Zwolinski.

Indelible Legacy: The Indispensable, Uncancelable Statesmanship of George Washington

Guest Commentary

When George Washington died in December 1799, his comrade in arms in the Revolution, Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee, eulogized the great general and president in the House of Representatives, describing him as “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” If anything, such words were a restrained expression of American sentiment, for Washington was the one man o

Interview about The Possibility of Religious Freedom: Early Natural Law and the Abrahamic Faiths

Podcast/Online Interview

Hope Leman interviewed Karen Taliaferro about her book The Possibility of Religious Freedom: Early Natural Law and the Abrahamic Faiths, which discusses conceptual chal

Publius's Constitution, Now More Than Ever

Podcast/Online Interview

Liberty Law Talk spoke with Colleen Sheehan about Publius and how he contributes to our knowledge and thinking about American constitutionalism.

Featured work

Indelible Legacy: The Indispensable, Uncancelable Statesmanship of George Washington

Authors: William Allen and Paul O. Carrese

Today, statues and monuments of George Washington are under siege, chiefly because of his ownership of slaves. Does he in fact still deserve the honor and veneration of his countrymen?  What sort of man was Washington, and what qualities in him made his achievements possible? Can those achievements be separated from his record as a slaveholder and as an ambitious man of affairs? What can we say of George Washington entire?

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