1-13
Coase and Bertrand on lighthouses
Walter Block and William Barnett
15-20
Empirical investigations and their normative interpretations: A reply to Barnett and Block
Elodie Bertrand
21-42
Political influence on historical ESA listings by state: a count data analysis
Bonnie Harllee, Myungsup Kim and Michael Nieswiadomy
43-58
Open AccessVoting over taxes: the case of tax evasion
Christian Traxler
59-84
Can foreign aid reduce income inequality and poverty?
Alberto Chong, Mark Gradstein and Cecilia Calderon
85-104
A basic tool set for a generalized directional model
Eric Linhart and Susumu Shikano
105-124
Did globalization restrict partisan politics? An empirical evaluation of social expenditures in a panel of OECD countries
Niklas Potrafke
125-143
Coordination, focal points and voting in strategic situations: a natural experiment
Ganna Pogrebna and Pavlo R. Blavatskyy
145-160
Different goods, different effects: exploring the effects of generalized social trust in large-N collective action
Kim Mannemar Sønderskov
161-184
The impact of surplus sharing on the portfolio mix of public sector defined benefit pension plans: a public choice approach
J. Richard Aronson, James A. Dearden and Vincent G. Munley
185-204
Leviathan resists: the endogenous relationship between privatization and firm performance
K. Peren Arin and Mehmet Ali Ulubaşoğlu
205-221
Corruption, federalism, and policy formation in the OECD: the case of energy policy
Per G. Fredriksson and Herman R. J. Vollebergh
223-244
Attitude-dependent altruism, turnout and voting
Julio J. Rotemberg
245-265
Open AccessThe nexus between corruption and capital account restrictions
Axel Dreher and Lars-H. R. Siemers
267-270
Book Review
David M. Primo, Rules and Restraint: Government Spending and the Design of Institutions
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007. xiii + 216 pages. USD 50.00 (cloth), 20.00 (paper)
Michael J. New
271-273
Book Review
William A. Niskanen. Reflections of a Political Economist: Selected Articles on Government Policies and Political Processes
Washington, D.C.: Cato Institute, 2008. vii + 363 Pages. USD 24.95 (cloth)
Philip K. Porter