Mercatus Center at George Mason University
Hayek Program Podcast
The Hayek Program Podcast includes audio from lectures, interviews, and discussions of scholars and visitors from the F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. The F. A. Hayek Program is devoted to the promotion of teaching and research on the institutional arrangements that are suitable for the support of free and prosperous societies. Implicit in this statement is the presumption that those arrangements are to some extent open to conscious selection, as well as the appreciation that the type of arrangement...
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Mercatus Center at George Mason University
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Podcast website
Latest episode
Jul 8, 2026
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Episodes
Paul Dragos Aligica — 2024 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 08.07.2026 1:07:48
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Paul Dragos Aligica delivers a keynote lecture at the 2024 Markets & Society conference on resilience as a research frontier in mainline political economy. He traces how resilience has been largely absent from comparative economic systems scholarship, only to explode as a topic in the last decade, mostly imported from ecology and complexity theory...
Bobbi Herzberg — 2025 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 24.06.2026 23:38
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Bobbi Herzberg delivers a keynote lecture at the 2025 Markets & Society conference on Vincent Ostrom’s understanding of democracy and self-governance. Reflecting on Ostrom’s life, scholarship, and enduring influence, Herzberg explores four central themes in his work: the emergence of social order through shared beliefs and norms, the capacity of in...
Emily Chamlee-Wright — 2025 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 10.06.2026 39:45
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Emily Chamlee-Wright delivers a keynote lecture at the 2025 Markets & Society conference on the precarious state of liberalism and the cultural foundations necessary to sustain a free society. Drawing on the cultural economy framework she developed with Virgil Storr, Chamlee-Wright argues that liberalism faces not only overt constitutional threats...
The Hayekian Triangle: The Wealth of Nations at 250 27.05.2026 1:32:03
Welcome to our new series, The Hayekian Triangle. This series will feature a range of conversations between our hosts: Virgil Storr, Chris Coyne, and Peter Boettke. On this episode, the three sit down to mark the 250th anniversary of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations — and to ask a deceptively simple question: why are we still reading a book written a quarter-millennium ago? From the invisible ha...
Liya Palagashvili on the Startup Mindset: How to Build a Career in Economics 13.05.2026 55:57
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Peter Boettke and Liya Palagashvili reflect on her journey from undergraduate student organizer to public intellectual, policy analyst, and Director of the Labor Policy Project. They discuss how Liya has approached her career with a startup mindset — exploring her work on the gig economy and portable benefits to create more dynamic and resilient labor...
Violent Saviors: A Conversation With Bill Easterly 29.04.2026 58:27
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Peter Boettke talks with Bill Easterly about his new book, Violent Saviors: The West’s Conquest of the Rest . Drawing on figures such as Adam Smith, P.T. Bauer, and Amartya Sen, Easterly argues that material progress alone cannot justify the denial of human dignity and consent. The conversation explores the idea of the “benevolent autocrat” and examine...
Chandran Kukathas — 2023 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 15.04.2026 42:49
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Chandran Kukathas delivers a keynote lecture at the 2023 Markets & Society conference arguing that an open society is best understood as a regime of toleration—one that can never be perfectly realized because every regime ultimately relies on power. He explores why toleration cannot be neatly limited by moral theory, why appeals to justice often be...
Senator Phil Gramm and Don Boudreaux on the Triumph of Economic Freedom 01.04.2026 57:04
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Peter Boettke talks with former U.S. Senator Phil Gramm and Don Boudreaux about their new book, The Triumph of Economic Freedom , a sweeping challenge to seven persistent myths about American capitalism. The conversation ranges from the Industrial Revolution and the Great Depression to the financial crisis. Along the way, they reflect on why these myth...
David Schmidtz — 2024 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 18.03.2026 41:48
**Content Warning** This episode includes discussions of sexual assault, which may be distressing for some listeners. Please listen with care. On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, David Schmidtz delivers a keynote lecture at the 2024 Markets & Society conference on the idea of self-governance. Drawing on examples from economics, moral philosophy, and higher education, Schmidtz argues...
Reconsidering FDR With David Beito 04.03.2026 59:13
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Peter Boettke speaks with historian David T. Beito about his new biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt. They discuss FDR’s record on civil liberties, including government surveillance and efforts to police speech; the administration’s approach to refugees and antisemitism; and early-career episodes like the Newport Sex Scandal. The conversation also cover...
Perspectives on Peace — Taboo Lines and the Process of Peace 18.02.2026 1:38:55
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Chris Coyne talks with Abigail Hall and Jayme Lemke about Kenneth and Elise Boulding’s insights into what it means to build and sustain peace. Drawing on her paper “ In Search of Stable Peace ,” Hall explores Kenneth Boulding’s framework for understanding peace and war, focusing on the roles of strain and strength and the shifting taboo lines that shap...
Chris Coyne — 2023 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 04.02.2026 41:37
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Chris Coyne delivers a keynote lecture at the 2023 Markets & Society conference on the foundations of peace. He contrasts “top-down” peacemaking driven by elites with “bottom-up” peacemaking that emerges from the everyday practices of ordinary people. Coyne argues that much of the social-scientific and policy conversation treats peace as a public g...
Perspectives on Peace — What Should Economists Teach? 21.01.2026 49:45
**This episode was recorded September 29, 2025. On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Chris Coyne speaks with Amy Crockett and Erwin Dekker about how economics shapes our understanding of peace, conflict, and cooperation, drawing on the work of Kenneth Boulding and James Buchanan. First, Coyne speaks with Amy Crockett about her upcoming paper, “Addressing Peace in Undergraduate Economics T...
Mario Small — 2024 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 07.01.2026 1:01:34
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Mario Small delivers a keynote lecture at the 2024 Markets & Society conference on financial institutions and racial inequality—using payday lenders as a lens to understand how place and institutional context shape economic life. Small begins with a deceptively simple question: how often is it easier to reach a payday lender than a traditional bank...
Perspectives on Peace – From Milorg to El Salvador: Kenneth Boulding’s Lessons on War and Peace 10.12.2025 45:42
On this episode, Chris Coyne speaks with Brigitta Jones, Nathan Goodman, and Karla Segovia about Kenneth Boulding’s insights on war, peace, and the political economy of conflict applied to contemporary questions about military organization and the dynamics of civil conflict. First, Jones discusses her coauthored paper with Coyne, “ The Political Economy of Milorg ,” which uses Boulding’s concept o...
Inside the Moral and Political Economy Program at Johns Hopkins University with Burgin, Halliday, and Liu 26.11.2025 1:01:29
On this episode, Peter Boettke chats with Angus Burgin, Simon Halliday, and Glory Liu to explore their innovative work at the Center for Economy and Society and the creation of a new undergraduate program in Moral and Political Economy. They dive into the revival of political economy as a cross-disciplinary field, the pedagogical innovations shaping the next generation of thinkers, the coming 250t...
Perspectives on Peace — Kenneth Boulding and the Everyday Practice of Peace 12.11.2025 1:27:34
On this episode, Chris Coyne speaks with Michael Romero, Mikayla Novak, and Anna Claire Flowers about the enduring influence of Kenneth Boulding on how we understand peace and cooperation. Romero discusses his paper “ Markets as a Peace Lab ,” coauthored with Virgil Storr, which explains how markets act as spaces where individuals cultivate trust, empathy, and peaceful exchange. Novak joins to dis...
Nina Bandelj — 2023 Markets and Society Conference Keynote 29.10.2025 44:56
On this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Nina Bandelj delivers a keynote lecture at the 2023 Markets & Society conference on the social life of money for children. Drawing on research about what she calls the “parenting economy,” she shows that parents increasingly treat children as human capital investments, using savings plans, loans, and educational spending to secure their futures. Ba...
Perspectives on Peace — Peter Boettke on the Life and Legacy of Kenneth E. Boulding 15.10.2025 1:19:02
On this episode, Chris Coyne and Peter Boettke explore the life and legacy of economist Kenneth E. Boulding, Boettke's former professor and mentor. Boettke recalls his experiences in Boulding's Great Books in Economics course and their conversations outside of class about peace, economics, and poetry. The conversation outlines Boulding’s path from studying chemistry at Oxford and an unusually earl...
Chandran Kukathas on Capitalism, Human Nature, and the Meaning of Life 01.10.2025 52:09
On this episode, Chandran Kukathas delivers a lecture at the Mercatus Center on capitalism, human nature, and the meaning of life. Kukathas argues that capitalism is less a fixed system than a constantly evolving set of rules and relationships, shaped by our restless desire to transform the world. He shows how politics, rent-seeking, and shifting definitions of capital are woven into its fabric, m...
Michael Clemens on the Trillion-Dollar Question of Immigration 17.09.2025 57:48
On this episode, Nathan Goodman is joined by Michael Clemens to discuss why immigration policy matters not just for migrants themselves but for broader economic growth. Drawing on his influential work, including “ Economics and Emigration: Trillion-Dollar Bills on the Sidewalk? ” (JEP, 2011) and “ The Place Premium: Bounding the Price Equivalent of Migration Barriers ” (REStat, 2019), Clemens expl...
Chandran Kukathas on "Dialogues on Immigration and the Open Society" 03.09.2025 1:06:50
On this episode, Peter Boettke chats with political theorist Chandran Kukathas on his latest book, Dialogues on Immigration and the Open Society (Routledge, 2025), which addresses the most important ethical and political questions about immigration and aims to teach by questioning rather than preaching. He urges conceptual clarity about terms like “civilization,” “state,” and “immigration,” and ar...
Timothy J. Dunn on Migrant Deaths and the Human Cost of Border Militarization 20.08.2025 1:34:10
On this episode, Nathan Goodman interviews sociologist Timothy Dunn on the militarization of the U.S.-Mexico border and its consequences for human rights. Dunn discusses how U.S. border militarization grew out of the Cold War era “low intensity conflict” doctrine and was expanded by both parties through the 1990s strategy of “prevention through deterrence.” While this policy reduced crossings in u...
Jacob T. Levy on Tensions Between Immigration Control and the Rule of Law 06.08.2025 1:18:33
On this episode, Nathan Goodman interviews political theorist Jacob Levy about the rule of law and its tensions with modern immigration enforcement. Drawing on his 2018 article, “ The rule of law and the risks of lawlessness ,” Levy explains that the rule of law requires laws to be general, predictable, and applied equally. Referencing thinkers like Montesquieu, Fuller, Hayek, Oakeshott, and Shkla...
Mark Pennington on Foucault’s Lessons for Liberal Political Economy 23.07.2025 57:10
On this episode, Peter Boettke chats with Mark Pennington on Mark's latest book, Foucault and Liberal Political Economy: Power, Knowledge, and Freedom (Oxford University Press, 2025). Pennington argues that Foucault's ideas on self-creation, disciplinary power, and biopolitics align with key liberal concerns about social control and individual agency. He critiques how both liberals and Foucauldian...
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