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Just as the political air is filled with talk of the inevitability of Barack Obama's re-election -- we are told that the kids at his Chicago headquarters are brimming with confidence -- in come some poll numbers showing him behind.
A century from now, observers may well identify the last months of 2011 as the start of higher education’s Great Disruption.
Biologics are essential to oncology care. As patents for older biologics begin to expire, the United States is developing an abbreviated regulatory process for the approval of similar biologics, which raises important considerations for the safe and appropriate incorporation of biosimilars into clinical practice for patients with cancer.
Ten years ago, the events of September 11 stunned America. Devastating terrorist attacks forced the nation to fundamentally reassess American national security. Please join us for a discussion moderated by John Yoo. Contributors Andrew C. McCarthy, Richard A. Epstein, and others will speak on the panel.
Over the next several decades the largest fiscal challenge facing the federal government is the aging of the population, which will drive up costs for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. When smaller numbers of workers must support larger numbers of retirees, public policy should encourage individuals to do three things.
Are teachers paid too much? It's a question that would ignite heated debate at the most mellow of cocktail parties. But it's a question that AEI took head-on this year.
At this AEI event, scholars will discuss what to make of the administration's current agenda and what to expect in the future.
Has Barack Obama's Democratic party given up on winning the votes of the white working class? Thomas Edsall, the longtime Washington Post reporter now with the Huffington Post, thinks so.









