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  • August 27, 2020
    American Spectator (Online)
    What If Elections Didn’t Matter? the Belgian Solution
    … Dorpe and Gijs. How would a weak coalition solve this problem? Again, Flemish secession probably would be the most effective policy to curb abusive public pensions. What should Belgium do? Forget another delayed coalition that governs in name only. Instead …
    By Doug Bandow
  • July 23, 2020
    Blog
    International Law and “Hate Speech” Online

    Governments are required to prohibit a broad and ambiguous category of speech while businesses are instructed to “respect” a putative right to be free of “hate speech,” a demand that could support banning a wide range of speech. The U.S. legislature and courts do not recognize such required prohibitions, but their reticence does not obligate social media companies incorporated in the United States.

    By John Samples
  • July 23, 2020
    Blog
    The Murky Origins of the H-2B Program’s Prevailing Wage Rule
    The Department of Labor (DOL) requires that businesses that hire workers under the H-2B program—America’s temporary worker program for seasonal nonagricultural jobs—pay a minimum wage known as the “prevailing wage.” This requirement substantially reduces the number of requests for H-2B workers.
    By David J. Bier
  • July 23, 2020
    Washington Examiner
    Roberts Rules
    Roberts has gone out of his way not to rock the boat, to maintain the status quo and extricate the court from the larger political narrative.
    By Ilya Shapiro
  • Summer 2020
    Regulation
    Working Papers
    Working Papers
    A summary of recent papers that may be of interest to Regulation readers.
    By Peter Van Doren
  • Summer 2020
    Regulation
    Do Markets Corrupt Our Morals?
    Do Markets Corrupt Our Morals?
    The debate over the morality of the market is usually carried out purely at the rhetorical level.
    By George C. Leef
  • Summer 2020
    Regulation
    The Politicization of Disaster Relief
    The Politicization of Disaster Relief
    Existing research repeatedly shows that political factors influence resource allocation in disasters, so it should come as no surprise if it is ultimately determined that politics affected the response to the COVID-19 crisis.
    By Steven Horwitz and E. Frank Stephenson
  • Summer 2020
    Regulation
    Fixing the Airlines Post-Pandemic
    Fixing the Airlines Post-Pandemic
    Commercial air travel’s existential crisis may force the government to make long-overdue reforms.
    By Matthew Barger and Ike Brannon
  • June 16, 2020
    Blog
    The Facts About H-4 Visas for Spouses of H-1B Workers
    America’s unemployment rate fell in May, but President Trump may still add more restrictions on temporary foreign workers. One category he may target is the H-4 visa for spouses of H-1B high skilled workers.
    By David J. Bier
  • June 10, 2020
    Blog
    The Facts About the L-1 Visa Program
    Eliminating the L-1 visa program would harm job and wage growth in the United States by making it much more difficult to expand businesses here.
    By David J. Bier
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