:THE LIGHTHOUSE
"Enlightening Ideas for Public Policy..."
Vol. 8, Issue 26; June 26, 2006

------------------------------------------------------------
-

IN THIS WEEK'S ISSUE:
1. Open Letter on Immigration: 500+ Economists Sign
Recommendation to President Bush and Congress
2. Among the Syrians
3. Positive Incentives for Iran
4. Fixing the Environment -- "Bureaucracy vs. the
Environment: What Should Be Done?" featuring Michael Shaw,
Randy Simmons, and Carl Close (Oakland, Calif., June 28,
2006)

------------------------------------------------------------
-

Welcome to THE LIGHTHOUSE, the weekly e-mail newsletter of
the Independent Institute, the non-politicized public-policy
research organization. Edited by Carl P. Close, THE
LIGHTHOUSE provides you with updates of the Institute's
current research, publications, events and media programs,
plus commentary on current affairs.

------------------------------------------------------------
-

OPEN LETTER ON IMMIGRATION: 500+ Economists Sign
Recommendation to President Bush and Members of Congress

"Throughout our history as an immigrant nation, those who
were already here have worried about the impact of
newcomers. Yet, over time, immigrants have become part of a
richer America, richer both economically and culturally. The
current debate over immigration is a healthy part of a
democratic society, but as economists and other social
scientists we are concerned that some of the fundamental
economics of immigration are too often obscured by misguided
commentary."

The above is excerpted from the Independent Institute's Open
Letter on Immigration, which has been signed by more than
500 economists and other social scientists from all 50
states and the District of Columbia. The list of signatories
includes five Nobel Laureates -- Thomas C. Schelling
(University of Maryland), Robert Lucas (University of
Chicago), Daniel McFadden (University of California,
Berkeley), Vernon Smith (George Mason University), and James
Heckman (University of Chicago).

The Open Letter on Immigration reminds President Bush and
all members of Congress of America's history as an immigrant
nation, the overall economic and social benefits of
immigration, and the power of immigration to lift the poor
out of poverty. The Letter has been mentioned favorably in
recent editorials in the NEW YORK TIMES and the WALL STREET
JOURNAL -- two newspapers famous for having frequently
opposing editorial views -- as well as a diverse array of
economists, including former Clinton advisor Brad DeLong and
former Bush advisor Greg Mankiw, who often seem to agree on
very little.

Why has the Open Letter struck a chord among economists?
Alexander Tabarrok, the Independent Institute's director of
research, offered the following reason in an op-ed he wrote
last month:

"While economists may be known for assuming self-interested
behavior wherever they look, economists in their work tend
not to distinguish between us and them," Tabarrok writes.
"We look instead for policies that at least in principle
make everyone better off. Policies that make us better off
at the price of making them even worse off are for
politicians, not economists.... It's a peculiar kind of
ethics that says we should greatly penalize very poor
immigrants in order to marginally benefit relatively rich
Americans."

See "Open Letter on Immigration"
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1727

"Immigration Consensus" (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 6/20/06)
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1754

"Why Ruin the World's Best Anti-Poverty Program?" by
Alexander Tabarrok (TCS DAILY, 5/25/06)
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1737

"¿Por qué echar a perder al mejor programa contra la pobreza
del mundo?"
http://www.elindependent.org/articulos/article.asp?id=1737

For useful references on immigration, see
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1722#4

------------------------------------------------------------
-

AMONG THE SYRIANS

Satellite television and the Internet are bringing global
news and ideas to Syrians like never before. That President
al-Assad's authoritarian regime permits the new
telecommunications technology may surprise some -- at least
perhaps until one hears the claim that, as one European
diplomat in Syria recently told Senior Fellow Alvaro Vargas
Llosa, "one in every five or six people might be an
informant."

Also noteworthy is that the new gadgets of modernization
have also helped spark a fundamentalist backlash. In his
latest op-ed, Vargas Llosa, who directs the Independent
Institute's Center on Global Prosperity, recounts several
examples of the new fundamentalist backlash that he
witnessed on his recent tour of Syria -- ranging from the
influence of religious leaders on political leaders, family
and local tensions that have pitted "modernists" versus
"fundamentalists," and more.

"Fundamentalist Islam has provided an ominous outlet for
some in this environment," writes Vargas Llosa. "But there
are also some signs of a civil society waiting to emerge. I
saw them in the female human rights activist who stood up at
a cultural event attended by the minister of information and
called the government 'dictatorial.' And in the souks of
al-Hamidiyya, where merchants trade frantically. And in the
young Syrians who marched down the meandering Recta Via
carrying Brazilian flags and yelling 'we won' after a
victory by the Brazilian team in the World Cup -- even
though they would most likely have trouble pointing to that
the country on a map. And in the Bedouin I met in the
al-Sham desert in central Syria who saw no contradiction
between the satellite dish he has placed outside of his tent
and his devotion to the tribe. And in the immigrants from
Lebanon, Mauritania and Jordan who translate and create
literature because they believe in the power of imagination
over censorship."

"Among the Syrians," by Alvaro Vargas Llosa (6/21/06)
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1755

"Entre los sirios"
http://www.elindependent.org/articulos/article.asp?id=1755

Center on Global Prosperity (Alvaro Vargas Llosa, director)
http://www.independent.org/research/cogp/

Don't miss Alvaro Vargas Llosa's superb books:

LIBERTY FOR LATIN AMERICA: How to Undo Five Hundred Years of
State Oppression
http://www.independent.org/store/book_detail.asp?bookID=55

THE CHE GUEVARA MYTH
http://www.independent.org/store/book_detail.asp?bookID=61

El Independent: El Blog del Centro Para la Prosperidad
Global de The Independent Institute
http://independent.typepad.com

------------------------------------------------------------
-

POSITIVE INCENTIVES FOR IRAN

Senior Fellow Ivan Eland, director of the Independent
Institute's Center on Peace & Liberty, weighs in on the last
diplomatic developments regarding Iran.

"The United Nations Security Council has recently sent Iran
a package of incentives to encourage that nation to halt its
nuclear program," writes Eland in his latest op-ed. The
proposals included selling Iran light water nuclear
technology, civilian aircraft, and spare parts. Although the
United States participated in this initiative and has agreed
to directly meet with the Iranians on the nuclear issue -- 
both positive developments -- it may need to go further if
there is to be any hope that Iran will arrest its nuclear
activities.

Eland argues that both military options and economic
sanctions against Iran are likely to be counterproductive:
military strikes would likely spur Iran to work harder to
get nuclear developments and economic sanctions would likely
be redirected onto the most disenfranchised in Iran. Both
would likely alienate pro-Western youth, causing them to
rally around the theocratic regime.

See "Give Iran Positive Incentives to Halt Its Nuclear
Program," by Ivan Eland (6/26/06)
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1758

"Démosle a Irán incentivos positivos para que detenga su
programa nuclear"
http://www.elindependent.org/articulos/article.asp?id=1758

THE EMPIRE HAS NO CLOTHES: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed, by I
van Eland
http://www.independent.org/store/book_detail.asp?bookID=54

RESURGENCE OF THE WARFARE STATE: The Crisis Since 9/11, by
Robert Higgs
http://www.independent.org/store/book_detail.asp?bookID=60

Center on Peace & Liberty (Ivan Eland, director)
http://www.independent.org/research/copal/

------------------------------------------------------------
-

FIXING THE ENVIRONMENT -- "Bureaucracy vs. the Environment:
What Should Be Done?" featuring Michael Shaw, Randy Simmons,
and Carl Close (Oakland, Calif., June 28, 2006)
http://www.independent.org/events/detail.asp?eventID=119

Dissatisfaction with the results of current environmental
practices have prompted a growing number of people to look
for ways to improve environmental quality that avoid
counterproductive command-and-control regulations.
Journalist Mark Dowie, for example, reported one aspect of
this trend in a recent article about how governments have
created millions of "conservation refugees" in developing
countries by creating wildlife preserves while trampling on
the rights and traditions of indigenous people.

"Younger, enlightened conservationists are now willing to
admit that wrecking the lives of 10 million or more poor,
powerless people, has been an enormous mistake; not only a
moral, social, philosophical and economic mistake, but an
ecological one as well," Dowie writes. "They have learned
from bitter experience that national parks and protected
areas surrounded by angry, hungry people, who describe
themselves as 'enemies of conservation,' are generally
doomed to fail." ("Problems in Paradise," SAN FRANCISCO
CHRONICLE, 11 June 2006)

The lesson -- that good aims don't guarantee good results -- 
applies widely to other environmental policies. Fortunately,
there is a growing body of ideas for promoting environmental
amenities that recognize the importance of creating positive
incentives, protecting property rights, and fostering
effective environmental stewardship, while at the same time
recognizing the realities of our often dysfunctional
"political ecology."

What can these failures teach us about how best to deal with
the realities of political ecology? And how can
entrepreneurship be fostered to better protect endangered
species, sensitive habitat, and other environmental
amenities?

Our upcoming Independent Policy Forum, "Bureaucracy vs. the
Environment: What Should Be Done?" (Wed., June 28) will
address these and related issues. Environmental entrepreneur
MICHAEL SHAW (Founder, The Liberty Garden) will discuss
"abundance ecology" versus "sustainable development."
Political scientist RANDY SIMMONS (Utah State Univ.) will
discuss reform of the Endangered Species Act. And the
Independent Institute's CARL CLOSE, co-editor of RE-THINKING
GREEN: Alternatives to Environmental Bureaucracy, will
discuss key reasons for the failure of many environmental
policies, along with the principles of successful
approaches.

SPEAKERS:
 -- MICHAEL SHAW is the owner and proprietor of Liberty
Garden, a native plant oasis located near Santa Cruz,
Calif., that he created using a program of seedbank
management.

 -- RANDY T. SIMMONS is professor of political science at
Utah State University, a senior fellow at PERC: The Property
and Environment Research Center, and author of two chapters
on endangered-species protection in the Independent
Institute book, RE-THINKING GREEN.

 -- CARL P. CLOSE is academic affairs director at the
Independent Institute and co-editor (with Robert Higgs) of
RE-THINKING GREEN: Alternatives to Environmental
Bureaucracy.

WHEN:
        Wednesday, June 28, 2006
        Reception and book signing: 6:30 p.m.
        Program: 7:00 - 8:30 p.m.

WHERE:
        The Independent Institute Conference Center
        100 Swan Way
        Oakland, CA 94621-1428
        For a map and directions, see
        http://www.independent.org/aboutus/map.asp

TICKETS: $15 per person ($10 for Independent Institute
Members). Special Offer: Admission and a copy of RE-THINKING
GREEN: $35 ($30 for members). Reserve tickets by calling
(510) 632-1366 or ordering online at
http://www.independent.org/events/detail.asp?eventID=119

Praise for RE-THINKING GREEN: Alternatives to Environmental
Bureaucracy, ed. by Robert Higgs and Carl P. Close:

"This superb book provides provocative, fresh insights into
the debate over appropriate public policy regarding the
environment."
 --GARY LIBECAP, Professor of Economics and Law, University
of Arizona

"RE-THINKING GREEN is a splendid book that is very adaptable
for teaching. The book is clearly written and interesting,
covers the environmental topics that concern us today, and
features good science and economic logic."
 --ROGER MEINERS, Professor of Economics, University of
Texas at Arlington

"Forces us to re-think the accomplishments of environmental
policy and the most effective strategies."
 --W. KIP VISCUSI, Professor of Law and Economics, Harvard
University

"We would all benefit if the arguments in RE-THINKING GREEN
are taken seriously by environmentalists and the general
public. "
 --DANIEL CHIROT, Professor of Sociology, University of
Washington

For information about RE-THINKING GREEN, see
http://www.independent.org/publications/books/book_summary.asp?bookID=58

For more information about the event "Bureaucracy vs. The
Environment: What Should Be Done?," see
http://www.independent.org/events/detail.asp?eventID=119

------------------------------------------------------------
-

THE LIGHTHOUSE, edited by Carl P. Close, is made possible by
the generous contributions of supporters of the Independent
Institute. If you enjoy THE LIGHTHOUSE, please consider
making a donation to the Independent Institute. For details
on the Independent Associate Membership program, see
http://www.independent.org/membership/ or contact us by
phone at 510-632-1366, e-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED], or
snail mail to: The Independent Institute, 100 Swan Way,
Oakland, CA 94621-1428. All contributions are
tax-deductible. Thank you!

------------------------------------------------------------
-

For previous issues of THE LIGHTHOUSE, see
http://www.independent.org/publications/the_lighthouse/.

------------------------------------------------------------
-

For information on books and other publications from The
Independent Institute, see
http://www.independent.org/publications/.

------------------------------------------------------------
-

For membership information, see
http://www.independent.org/membership/

------------------------------------------------------------
-

To subscribe or unsubscribe, please go to The Lighthouse
page:
http://www.independent.org/publications/the_lighthouse/.
Enter your email address, select "Subscribe" or
"Unsubscribe", and click "Submit".

------------------------------------------------------------
-

THE LIGHTHOUSE
ISSN 1526-173X
Copyright © 2006 The Independent Institute
100 Swan Way Oakland, CA 94621-1428
(510) 632-1366 phone
(510) 568-6040 fax



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Yahoo! Groups gets a make over. See the new email design.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/XISQkA/lOaOAA/yQLSAA/KlSolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

ForumWebSiteAt  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Libertarian  
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Libertarian/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to