A Balanced Threat Assessment of China’s South China Sea Policy

U.S. lawmakers and analysts see China’s efforts to control much of the South China Sea as a serious threat, endangering regional security, freedom of navigation, and the liberal world order.  A new paper from Benjamin Herscovitch finds that political leaders and experts exaggerate the dangers of China’s South China Sea policy. “Although China’s South China Sea policy is inconsistent with some of the norms and institutions of the rules-based liberal world order,” says Herscovitch, “Beijing does not seek to undermine this order as a whole and remains supportive of key elements of the international system.”

Doomed to Repeat It: The Long History of America’s Protectionist Failures

A renewed focus on international trade’s disruptions to the U.S. economy, while worthwhile, has spawned troubling suggestions that the U.S. government should be more willing to experiment again with protectionism to help American workers and the economy. In a new paper, Cato scholar Scott Lincicome shows that, contrary to the fashionable rhetoric, American protectionism has repeatedly failed as an economic strategy.

Preserving the Iran Nuclear Deal: Perils and Prospects

Since he started his bid for office, President Donald Trump has been a forceful detractor of the Iran nuclear deal, repeatedly vowing to dismantle it. But the nuclear deal affords the United States a number of opportunities, if the administration sustains it. In a new paper, Ariane M. Tabatabai says that the U.S. should clearly reaffirm its commitment to the deal; help reintegrate Iran into the international economy; keep official channels of communication open with Tehran; and engage, rather than isolate, the Islamic Republic.

Renegotiating NAFTA in the Era of Trump: Keeping the Trade Liberalization In and the Protectionism Out

The United States, Canada, and Mexico are about to begin an historic renegotiation of NAFTA. And while the proposal to renegotiate NAFTA may have been motivated by protectionist objectives, there is potential to minimize or even avert protectionist outcomes. A new working paper from Simon Lester, Inu Manak, and Daniel J. Ikenson argues that renegotiation presents the opportunity to modernize, fix, and expand the rules of NAFTA, and produce a “freer” free trade agreement, which would be good for the North American economy.

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Cato University: College of History and Philosophy

History is indispensable to understanding and defending liberty under our constitutionally limited, representative government. And at the core of that history is philosophy: the underlying beliefs and values that guided the American Founders in their creating a constitutional order of separated powers, checks and balances, and liberty. Cato University’s College of History and Philosophy in October combines these two powerful subjects together to explore the history of liberty and justice, of wealth and poverty, of individual rights and the rule of law.

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The Libertarian Mind Audiobook

The Libertarian Mind, by David Boaz, longtime executive vice president of the Cato Institute, is the best available guide to the history, ideas, and growth of libertarianism, and is the ultimate resource for the current, burgeoning libertarian movement. This acclaimed book is now available as a fully unabridged audiobook, ready for immediate downloading, on Audible.com.

The Supreme Court: Past and Prologue
A Look at the October 2016 and 2017 Terms

The annual Constitution Day symposium, presented by Cato’s Center for Constitutional Studies, marks the day in 1787 that the Constitutional Convention finished drafting the U.S. Constitution. We celebrate that event each year with the release of the new issue of the Cato Supreme Court Review and with a day-long symposium featuring noted scholars discussing the recently concluded Supreme Court term and the important cases coming up.