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Is global governance fundamentally different from earlier forms of international cooperation? Is it a necessary response to the effects of globalization? Does the U.S. Constitution limit the ways the United States can engage in global governance? The AEI Project on Sovereignty will explore the effects of globalization on international law, institutions and the Constitution.
Join the Federalist Society and AEI for a panel discussion of John Yoo and Julian Ku's new book, where Martin Flaherty of the Fordham University School of Law and Jeremy Rabkin of the George Mason University School of Law will join the authors in a discussion of their proposals and whether they are faithful to our Constitution, our history and our international law obligations.
Twenty-five top college students will travel to the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington, D.C. this June to participate in the 2012 American Enterprise Summer Institute.
America's public schools were once thought to provide the cornerstone for an informed citizenry, but we are playing fast and loose with our future if we continue to downplay or simply ignore the role civic education plays in making citizens of us all.
Please see Day 1 for agenda.
Should foreign law be used in U.S. judicial decision-making?
Once the most open-minded and intellectually rigorous institutions, America's colleges and universities have become close-minded and dishonest.





