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Saturday, December 22, 2007

Another Review of Freedomnomics

I first heard of Dr. John R. Lott's Freedomnomics: Why the Free Market Works and Other Half-Baked Theories Don't on Neal Boortz's radio program. Mr. Boortz made repeated reference to one particular chapter in the book dealing with the effects women's suffrage has had on the growth of government in the United States, and I found my interest piqued, especially as our household already has Dr. Lott's More Guns, Less Crime on our shelves, and I know him to be a meticulous researcher. . . .

As I said, Dr. Lott covers far more than this. Overall, the book is to-the-point, logically organized, quite accessible to the layman, and highly entertaining. Highly recommended.

Labels: BookReview

posted by John Lott at 5:17 PM

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    About Me

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    Name: John Lott
    Location: Virginia, United States

    My commentary on a broad array of economics and crime related issues.

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Academic Papers

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My Op-eds

    List of my Op-eds

Reviews of Freedomnomics

    Book Reviews of Freedomnomics

Other Affiliated Websites

    John R. Lott, Jr.
    Some of my data is available here

Previous Posts

  • Appearance from Thursday on The Greg Knapp Experience
  • Another mention of Freedomnomics
  • More comments on Freedomnomics
  • Podcast from Appearance on Air America last Thursday
  • Appearing on CSPAN 1 Thursday at 10:40 AM EST
  • Some Feedback on My Op-ed on Women's Suffrage
  • New Op-ed: Women's suffrage over time
  • Freedomnomics Recommended as "Great Gift" for Holi...
  • C-SPAN 2 tonight at 7 PM EST
  • Recommended Books for Christmas Gifts
    Terms of Use
    Copyright 2005 by John R. Lott, Jr. All rights reserved

Book Reviews

    For a list of book reviews on The Bias Against Guns, click here.

Interesting Past Topics

    -Research finding a drop in violent crime rates from Right-to-carry laws
    -Ranking Economists
    -National Academies of Science Panel on Firearms
    -Baghdad murder rate
    -Arming Pilots
    -Appalachian law school attack
    -Sources for Defensive Gun Uses
    -The Merced Pitchfork Killings
    -Fraudulent website pretending to be run by me
    -Ian Ayres and John Donohue
    -General discussion of my 1997 and 2002 surveys as well as related surveys
    -Problems with Wikipedia
    -Errata for Gun Books

Links

    Economist and Law Professor David D. Friedman's Blog

    Economist Greg Mankiw's Blog

    Of Arms & the Law

    Crime file news -- Paul Huebl

    Cold Comfort, Economist John Lott discusses the benefits of guns--and the hazards of pointing them out.

    A debate that I had with George Mason University's Robert Ehrlich on guns

    Lyonette Louis-Jacques's page on Firearms Regulation Worldwide

    An interview concerning More Guns, Less Crime: Understanding Crime and Gun Control Laws

    The End of Myth: An Interview with Dr. John Lott

    Art DeVany's website, one of the more innovative economists in the last few decades

    Cafe Hayek -- run by my friends Don Boudreaux and Russell Roberts

    St. Cloud State University Scholars

    Bryan Caplan at George Mason University

    Alphecca -- weekly review on the media's coverage of guns

    Xrlq -- Some interesting coverage of the law.
    Career Police Officer
    Gun Law News
    Georgia Right-to-Carry
    Darnell's The Independent Conservative Blog
    Clayton Cramer's Blog
    My hidden mathematical ability (a math professor with the same name)
    geekwitha45
    Interview with National Review Online
    Wrightwing's blog
    Al Lowe's blog
    St. Maximos' Hut
    Dad29
    Craig Newmark
    Eric Rasmusen
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    Dr. T's EconLinks.com
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    Pieces I have written at BigGovernment.com

    Spanish Translation of this Website

Data

    Johnlott.org
    (description of book, downloadable data sets, and discussions of previous controversies)

    Updated Media Analysis of Appalachian Law School Attack

    Journal of Legal Studies paper on spoiled ballots during the 2000 Presidential Election

    Data set from USA Today, STATA 7.0 data set

    "Do" File for some of the basic regressions from the paper

    International Crime Victimization Survey data from 2000

    John Lott's CV

More Books of Mine


    More Guns Less Crime


    The Bias Against Guns


    Straight Shooting: Firearms, Economics and Public Policy


    Are Predatory Commitments Credible? Who Should the Courts Believe?

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