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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.
The decline in unemployment inflows is interpreted as a decrease in the intensity of idiosyncratic labor demand shocks, a key parameter in search and matching models of unemployment.
Washington can ignore the world for only so long before the world comes knocking on its door. And while getting America’s fiscal house in order has to be the priority for any new president elected in 2012, his or her administration will be faced with a growing list of foreign-policy issues hardly any less important.
The Palestinian Authority succeeded last Monday in becoming a member state in the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
Our declared interests in Asia keep growing, we ask PACOM to do what it can to advance them, but we starve them of resources to do the job. We are coming to a point where either we retrench from our commitments in Asia or we decide as a nation to properly fund them.
Employers worry more about the effects of a bad hire than about the problems of hiring someone who is competent but not exceptional.
The ex-ante best U.S. Social Security replacement rate structure is fairly "flat."
Research is about averages while clinical practice is always about the individual in the doctor's office. Balancing symptom relief with side effects is a delicate and idiosyncratic process.







