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The dramatic rise in college tuition costs is due to the ways in which they organize and allocate resources--not lavish university facilities and extra student services. The real levers for increasing efficiency include rethinking student-faculty ratios, eliminating under-enrolled programs, and trimming unnecessary administrative positions.
Vance Fried explains what decision makers should know to rein in the cost of collage
Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's political arrogance and his disdain for both free press and judicial independence threatens the country's rule of law.
Two Harvard law professors make the case for improving tort law to better protect individuals and discipline businesses.
On October 15, Daniel Fried, senior director of European and Eurasian affairs at the National Security Council, shared his views and fielded questions on the status of the transatlantic relationship and the ways of increasing cooperation between the U.S. and Europe.
The legal professoriate and commentariat are completely unhinged over the impending demise of the individual mandate. ... Let's go to the transcript and try to explain this one more time, in terms that even the Harvard crowd may be able to comprehend.
As the freedom agenda takes center stage in the Bush administration's foreign policy strategy, transatlantic relations seem in many ways to have been sidelined. The European-American divide over the war in Iraq and the difficulties faced by Europeans and Americans in Afghanistan have...
In
Making Tort Law, Charles Fried and David Rosenberg, professors at Harvard Law School, address the intellectual roots of the "tort explosion" and identify the functions that tort law can and cannot serve. Their rigorous and powerful analysis contends that the justification of tort liability as...






