Introduction by Donald J. Boudreaux, Christopher J. Coyne, and Brian Kogelmann
Part I: Theoretical Foundations
Chapter 1: Politics Without Romance, Without Romance: The Meta-Problem for Virginia Political Economy by Jason Lee Byas
Chapter 2: Co-production and the Use of Knowledge in Public Administration by Jordan J. Hunter
Chapter 3: How Public Governance and Markets Became Learning Processes by Mariam Sedighi
Chapter 4: Rule-Based Fiscal Governance: Challenges, Alternatives, and a Path for Reform by Andrew Berryhill
Chapter 5: “Human Wisdom”: What Plato Can Teach Us About Technocracy by Eryn Rozonoyer
Chapter 6: James M. Buchanan and the Unromantic Rhetoric of Public Choice by Alexander W. Morales
Part II: Applications
Chapter 7: Aura and the Aesthetics of Constitutional Creation: Knowledge and Representation in the Drafting of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan by Todd Maslyk
Chapter 8: Masquerading Democracies: What Protest Actions Can Inform Us About the True State of the Regime? by Sargis Karavardanyan
Chapter 9: Re-examining Commerce’s Impact on Peace and Conflicts by Paa-Kwesi Heto
Chapter 10: Transaction Costs and Authoritarian Institutions: Early Coalition Size and Regime Party-Building by Curtis Bram
Chapter 11: Disaster Recovery, Entrepreneurship, and the American Revolution: Women in the Foundations of American Political Economy by Kirstin Anderson Birkhaug