FOUNDER
Michael Murakami, seminar of '01
Harvard University '01, BA
Univ. of Calif., Berkeley '08, Ph.D.

WEBMASTER
Shterna Friedman '04
Barnard College '03
Iowa Writers' Workshop MFA '06

 

CRITICAL REVIEW FOUNDATION
Prof. Samuel DeCanio '98, Pres. Prof. Jeffrey Friedman, Exec. Dir.
Bruce Canter, Vice President
Dan Greenberg, Vice President
Prof. Earl C. Ravenal, Vice Pres.
Jaime Sneider '01, Director
Phineas Upham '01, Director



A question from the audience during the Critical Review Foundation Conference on Political Ignorance and Dogmatism, Boston, August 31, 2008.


The final panel at the Critical Review Foundation Conference on Political Ignorance and Dogmatism: L-R, Jeffrey Friedman, Tom Hoffman, Russ Muirhead, and Mark Pennington (not shown: Ilya Somin).

LATEST NEWS:

  • Dain Fitzgerald interviews Mark Pennington (seminar of '96) on his recent article in Critical Review on deliberative democracy. Listen here.

  • Richard Cornuelle, the first president of the Critical Review Foundation, has died. For a picture of Dick and a statement about him from Jeffrey Friedman, please click on "Photos" over in the left margin of this page.

  • Mark Pennington's first book, Robust Political Economy, was published last month by Edward Elgar (in paperback!). It combines the political-ignorance perspective with public-choice theory. Mark argues that we should not assume, as political theorists usually do, that political decision makers either know how to achieve the public good or care about achieving it. Mark attended the seminar of 1996 and now teaches at the University of London.

  • Kai Jaeger, an alumnus of the 2009 seminar, has been accepted by the Duke University Ph.D. program. Kai will be the first seminar alumnus to enter the subfield of comparative politics. Kai already has a paper with a leading comparative politics journal at the second revise & resubmit stage (meaning it is about to be accepted). Kai explains the political turmoil in Thailand, which revolves around former Prime Minister Thaksin--a Berlusconi-like figure who is trying to retake power undemocratically. Kai argues that peasants in the countryside, who tend to support Thaksin, -were not exposed to media coverage of his corrupt dealings and his anti-monarchical statements. Meanwhile Bangkok residents, who generally oppose Thaksin, had access to these media reports.
  • In December 2010, The University of Pennsylvania Press republished our special issue on the financial crisis in book form, under the title of What Caused the Financial Crisis. It can be ordered here. In September 2011, Penn will publish Engineering the Financial Crisis, by Jeffrey Friedman and Wladimir Kraus. Friedman and Kraus contend that the Basel I accords, as implemented in the United States in 2001, were the fundamental cause of the financial crisis.

  • Dain Fitzgerald interviews Chris Wisniewski (seminar of '99) on his recent article in Critical Review on Cultural Studies. Listen here.
  • Dain Fitzgerald interviews Slavisa Tasic (seminar of '09) on his recent article in Critical Review on the overconfidence of regulators. Listen here.

  • Mateusz Machaj has successfully defended his dissertation, entitled "Property Rights in Socialism and Capitalism: A Comparative Analysis," at the University of Wroclaw, where he has assumed the position of assistant professor of economics and management. He attended the 2009 summer seminar, coauthored one of the key articles in our special financial-crisis issue. His article on Hayek is forthcoming in 2011.

  • On June 16 and 17, 2009, twelve schlolars ranging from recent Ph.D.s to advanced college undergraduates came to San Antonio from as far away as Kiev to participate in the eleventh "Challenges to Classical Liberalism" seminar. These intensive, 1000-pages-of-reading-in-advance events have been held since 1995 whenever a critical mass of extremely talented future scholars, usually with a background in Austrian-school economics, has materialized. Among the alumni of the seminars whose research agendas have been materially affected by their participation are Profs. Sam DeCanio (Yale), Tom Hoffman (Spring Hill College), Michael Murakami (Georgetown), Mark Pennington (London), Ilya Somin (George Mason), and Nick Weller (USC).

    The 2009 group promises to contribute many more names to that illustrious list. Photos of the seminar are posted on this site--click on Photos icon to your left.

  • Sam DeCanio (seminar of 1998) has accepted the position of Assistant Professor of Political Science at Yale University, where he joins John Bullock (seminar of 1999) on the tenure track.

  • On August 31, 2008, at the conclusion of the American Political Science Association convention in Boston, the Critical Review Foundation held its first-ever scholarly conference, at which Profs. John Bullock (CR seminar of 1999), Sam DeCanio (’98), Tom Hoffman (’95) Mike Murakami (‘01), Mark Pennington (’96), Ilya Somin (’97), and Nick Weller (’03) explored the implications of public ignorance with eminent scholars from the United States and Canada. The dialogue continued for six hours and, as many commented afterwards, nobody left early who didn’t need to catch a plane!

    Click on Photos in the left margin to see some pictures of the event. A videotape of the entire event is posted under Audio & Video to your left, and a transcript of the conference was published in Critical Review vol. 20, no. 4..

  • To change your Critical Review mailing address, or your e-mail address, please send a message to [email protected].