Recent publications
Fictional Bias
There is a very real and very pervasive left-wing bias amongst the majority of authors busily churning out product to stock the shelves of your local bookstore. This phenomenon is most readily visible within the non-fiction political sections,...
Climategate: What we've learned so far
The exposure of thousands of emails and documents from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia is one of the biggest developments in the climate change debate for the last ten years. The emails-now dubbed...
Volume 61 Number 3
Chris Berg and Sinclair Davidson on what we've learned so far about climategate; Richard Allsop on Western Civilisation; Louise Staley on Food Innovation; Christopher Pyne on Question Time; Michael MacConnell on bias in popular fiction; David...
Gina Rinehart on Ron Manners' Heroic Misadventures - 18/01/2010
Gina Rinehart discusses Ron Manners' new book: Heroic Misadventures.
Liberty Sessions | The Vote Motive
Julie Novak, Research Fellow at the Institute of Public Affairs, speaks about Gordon Tullock's public choice theory essay 'The Vote Motive'.
Liberty Sessions | For Good And Evil: The Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization
Tim Wilson, Director of the Climate and Trade Unit at the Institute of Public Affairs, speaks about Charles Adams' 'For Good and Evil: The Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization'.
Risks and Opportunities of the Climate Change Policy
John Roskam, Executive Director of the Institute of Public Affairs. Risks and Opportunities of the Climate Change Policy
Liberty Sessions | The Years of Lyndon Johnson
John Roskam, Executive Director of the Institute of Public Affairs, speaks about Robert Caro's epic biography, The Years of Lyndon Johnson.
Liberty Sessions | Two Treatises of Government
Chris Berg talks about John Locke's influential 'Two Treatises of Government'.
Liberty Sessions | The Open Society and its Enemies
Michael Brennan talks about Karl Popper's classic two-volume 'The Open Society and its Enemies'.