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LulzSec and the open society

Type: Think PiecesWritten by Preston Byrne | Wednesday 13 July 2011

Subversion has been subverted, says PJ Byrne. Mass media gives us a sanitized and dumbed-down mélange of culture. LulzSec was so popular precisely because it lacked the solemn pompousness of most "subversives", and it was beholden to nobody. What matters is not our bank balance but our internal liberty to think and act freely.

How better regulation can make Private Military Contractors work

Type: Think PiecesWritten by Anna Moore | Monday 11 July 2011

Are Private Military Contractors (PMCs) the villains of modern warfare? In this extended piece, Anna Moore argues that PMCs can play a vital – and valuable – role in making armies more flexible and streamlined, if properly used by governments. As in so many areas, private contractors can give states better results in key areas of public goods – if governments can avoid the oversight failures that have blighted PMCs' operations so far and strive for competition and transparency.

A thicket of summer grass: the thymotic anger behind the strikes

Type: Think PiecesWritten by Preston Byrne | Thursday 16 June 2011

What drives 750,000 people to the point of ruining everyone else's day by striking? PJ Byrne reflects on the "anger deriving from a wounded sense of self-worth" that drives so many people to strike.

The folly of the public benefit test

Type: Think PiecesWritten by James Croft | Thursday 26 May 2011

The "public benefit test" is a misguided attempt to force consolidation in the independent education market, argues James Croft.

Does Inequality Matter?

Type: ReportsWritten by Dalibor Rohac | Tuesday 17 May 2011

Income inequality measures don't tell us much about poverty and, as this report argues, can actually mask declines in living standards of the poor. Furthermore, there is no good reason to use country-specific inequality measures as opposed to a global measure; if the latter is used, prioritites for poverty reduction shift dramatically. This report argues against the current fashion for using inequality as a measure of living standards, and argues that it may be hindering efforts to fight poverty.

Reflections on regulation: Experience and the future

Type: ReportsWritten by Stephen Littlechild, Ian Byatt, Chris Bolt, John Swift, Graham Corbett, Tim Ambler, Eamonn Butler | Thursday 12 May 2011

In this report, five ex-regulators discuss their experiences and reflect on the successes and failures of the regulatory framework that followed the privatizations of the 1980s and 1990s. Regulation expert Tim Ambler concludes by discussing the future of regulation, and outlining the different paths that may be taken to reform the sector.

Free Schools are heading for failure

Type: Think PiecesWritten by James Croft | Wednesday 11 May 2011

The government’s failure to stimulate free school supply has major implications for its overall programme of market expansion, argues James Croft.

Profit-making Free Schools: Unlocking the Potential of England's Proprietorial Schools Sector

Type: ReportsWritten by James Croft | Thursday 21 April 2011

In this groundbreaking report, James Croft argues that the crisis of school places can only be met by giving true freedom to Free Schools and allowing profit-making schools to operate within the Free Schools programme. In his study of profit-making school outcomes, he shows that schools charging fees on a par with the average state expenditure per pupil equal or exceed the performance of average independent schools. As the report shows, unlocking the power of profit within the Free Schools programme would be a revolution in schooling in England.

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The impact of proportional representation and coalition government on fiscal policy

Type: Think PiecesWritten by James Paton | Monday 18 April 2011

Many claims are made about the impact of voting systems on government fiscal policies, but what does the international evidence say? In this think piece, James Paton assesses the impact of coalition government and systems of proportional representation on government fiscal policies in five different countries, and discusses the implication of his findings for the US.

The case for NGDP targeting – lessons from the Great Recession

Type: Think PiecesWritten by Tom Clougherty | Monday 11 April 2011

Inflation targeting has failed. In a new report for the ASI, Scott Sumner argues that the Bank of England should adopt a policy of nominal GDP (NGDP) targeting, which would address the dual concerns of macroeconomic policy – inflation and growth – in one target. Here, the ASI's Executive Director Tom Clougherty summarizes the report and its findings. (Download PDF)

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