04/03/2024
To my surprise I discover that I never uploaded the PDFs to the articles in the 2nd issue (2019!) of the MOLINARI REVIEW. I’d intended to have an interval between print publication and web publication in order to incentivise people to buy the print edition, but I hadn’t intended to have a *five-year* interval. I thought I remembered posting the PDFs a while ago, but apparently my memory befoozled me. (Well, the past few years have been … complicated.)
Okay, so I’ve uploaded them now. Thus if you’re one of those penurious souls who never purchased the hard copy, you can now read the articles for free! Check out Jason Lee Byas defending market anarchism vis-à-vis communist anarchism; Joseph R. Stromberg defending Gabriel Kolko’s account of the role of big business in setting up the regulatory state; Thomas Lafayette Bateman III and Walter E. Block on the political implications of the free will debate; an exchange between Jan Narveson and James P. Sterba over whether a commitment to welfare rights follows from libertarian premises; and an exchange among Gus diZerega, Chris Matthew Sciabarra, and your humble correspondent on the merits and demerits of libertarianism in general and Ayn Rand in particular.
All this Molinari goodness is available via this link:
https://praxeology.net/molinari-review-archive.htm
By the way, the 3rd issue (which will feature, inter alia, a reply to Stromberg from Robert Bradley Jr. and Roger Donway, along with Stromberg’s counter-reply) has been nearly ready to go for a while now; I just haven’t found the time to put the damn thing together. Maybe this summer? (It’d be nice if the 3rd installment of the MOLINARI REVIEW could appear before the still-longer-awaited 3rd volume of Harlan Ellison’s DANGEROUS VISIONS anthology, due out this fall. People have been waiting for that sucker since 1973.)
04/11/2020
The Fall 2019 issue of the Molinari Review, previously available in print, is now also available on Kindle:
Molinari Review Volume 1, No. 2 (Autumn 2019)
The Molinari Review is an open-access, interdisciplinary journal of libertarian research, where libertarianism is broadly understood as including everything from Emma Goldman to Ayn Rand.
01/02/2020
We're happy to announce the publication of our long-awaited second issue, with contributions from Jason Lee Byas, Joseph R. Stromberg, Thomas Lafayette Bateman III, Walter E. Block, Jan Narveson, James P. Sterba, Chris Matthew Sciabarra, Gus diZerega, and Roderick T. Long. Details here:
Molinari Review I.2: What Lies Within? | Austro-Athenian Empire
Molinari Review I.2: What Lies Within? By Roderick on January 2, 2020 0 [cross-posted at C4SS, BHL, and POT] The long-awaited second issue of the Molinari Review (the Molinari Institute’s interdisciplinary, open-access, libertarian academic journal) is here! Nearly twice the length of the first is...
01/02/2020
We regret the recent passing of two of our Editorial Board Members, and two great scholars of liberty: Bertrand Lemennicier and Butler Shaffer. They will be much missed. Our condolences to friends and family.
09/11/2019
We're happy to announce that a) the long-awaited second issue of the 𝙈𝙤𝙡𝙞𝙣𝙖𝙧𝙞 𝙍𝙚𝙫𝙞𝙚𝙬 will be published later this month, and b) in the meantime, the entire first issue is now available for free online:
Molinari Review I.1 Now Free Online, Molinari Review I.2 Heading to Print | Austro-Athenian Empire
Molinari Review I.1 Now Free Online, Molinari Review I.2 Heading to Print By Roderick on September 11, 2019 0 In celebration of the 17th anniversary of the Molinari Institute, we’re happy to announce: a) The long-awaited second issue of the Molinari Review will be published later this month. More ...
06/09/2016
Our website was down.
Now it's back.
Aabaco is evil.
That is all.
05/21/2016
We're pleased to announce that our first issue has now been published! Details here: http://bleedingheartlibertarians.com/2016/05/molinari-review-1-1-what-lies-within/
Molinari Review 1.1: What Lies Within?
The Molinari Institute (the parent organization of the Center for a Stateless Society) is proud to announce the publication of the first issue of our new interdisciplinary, open-access, libertarian…
04/15/2015
http://aaeblog.com/2015/04/15/the-irs-loves-anarchy/
The IRS Loves Anarchy! | Austro-Athenian Empire
The IRS Loves Anarchy! By Roderick on April 15, 2015 The Molinari Institute is delighted to announce that it has been declared by the IRS to be a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofit organisation; hence donations to the Molinari Institute – and thus to the Institute’s media center, the Center for a Statel…
12/24/2014
The Molinari Institute is pleased to announce a new interdisciplinary, open-access academic journal, the MOLINARI REVIEW.
The MOLINARI REVIEW seeks to publish scholarship, sympathetic or critical, in and/or on the libertarian tradition, broadly understood as including classical liberalism, individualist anarchism, social anarchism, anarcho-capitalism, anarcho-communism, anarcho-syndicalism, anarcha-feminism, panarchism, voluntaryism, mutualism, agorism, distributism, Austrianism, Georgism, public choice, and beyond – essentially, everything from Emma Goldman to Ayn Rand, C. L. R. James to F. A. Hayek, Alexis de Tocqueville to Michel Foucault. (We see exciting affiliations among these strands of the libertarian tradition; but you don’t have to agree with us about that to publish in our pages.)
Disciplines in which we expect to publish include philosophy, political science, economics, history, sociology, psychology, anthropology, theology, ecology, literature, and law.
We aim to enhance the visibility of libertarian scholarship, to expand the boundaries of traditional libertarian discussion, and to provide a home for cutting-edge research in the theory and practice of human liberty.
All submissions will be peer-reviewed. We also plan to get our content indexed in such standard resources as International Political Science Abstracts and The Philosopher’s Index.
The journal will be published both in print (via print-on-demand) and online (with free access); all content will be made available through a Creative Commons Attribution license. We regard intellectual-property restrictions as a combination of censorship and protectionism, and hope to contribute to a freer culture.