What's all this fuss about free-market anarchism? Well, Professor Stringham didn't just introduce the topic in this massive book. He went the whole way to the end: he created what we've desperately needed for decades: a complete reader on the topic. A monumental book at 700 pages, fully indexed, this is collection we've always wanted.
Why, oh why, didn't this appear years ago? Never mind: the point is that it is here. And the Mises Institute is just so very pleased to make it available, and to offer a special congratulations to Edward Stringham for taking on the seemingly impossible, making sound judgments, and spending the necessary hundreds of hours that it took to put this together.
If you love the idea of free-market anarchism, hate it, or are just intrigued that so many are steeped in the rigor and logic of the prospects of a free society without the state, this is the collection that gives you all you need to find your way around this burgeoning line of thought.
And at this price, the book is a steal (and, no, stealing would not be allowed under free-market anarchism; see Rothbard's chapter two).
Roderick Long writes:
This nearly 700-page book is quite simply the definitive collection on free-market anarchism. Its forty chapters include contributions from Randy Barnett, Bruce Benson, Bryan Caplan, Roy Childs, Anthony de Jasay, David Friedman, John Hasnas, Hans Hoppe, Jeff Hummel, Don Lavoie, Murray Rothbard, the Tannehills, and many more, including even your humble correspondent. It also features historical classics by Voltairine de Cleyre, Gustave de Molinari, Lysander Spooner, and Benjamin Tucker, among others. It covers both moral arguments and economic ones; it ranges over both abstract theory and historical examples. It even includes important criticisms of market anarchism, like Tyler Cowen’s and Robert Nozick’s, along with anarchist replies. This, here and now, is it. Wonder no more what is the market anarchist book to recommend to the anarcho-curious or wave menacingly at the statist heathen; it’s this one.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction—Edward P. Stringham
Section I: Theory of Private Property Anarchism
2. Police, Law, and the Courts—Murray Rothbard
3. The Machinery of Freedom: Guide to a Radical Capitalism (excerpt)—David Friedman
4. Market for Liberty (excerpt)—Morris and Linda Tannehill
5. Pursuing Justice in a Free Society: Crime Prevention and the Legal Order—Randy Barnett
6. Capitalist Production and the Problem of Public Goods—Hans Hoppe
7. National Defense and the Public-Goods Problem—Jeffrey Rogers Hummel and Don Lavoie
8. Defending a Free Nation—Roderick Long
9. The Myth of the Rule of Law—John Hasnas
Section II: Debate
10. The State—Robert Nozick
11. The Invisible Hand Strikes Back—Roy A. Childs
12. Robert Nozick and the Immaculate Conception of the State—Murray Rothbard
13. Objectivism and the State: An Open Letter to Ayn Rand—Roy Childs
14. Do We Ever Really Get Out of Anarchy?—Alfred G. Cuzan
15. Law as a Public Good: The Economics of Anarchy—Tyler Cowen
16. Law as a Private Good: A Response to Tyler Cowen on the Economics of Anarchy—David Friedman
17. Rejoinder to David Friedman on the Economics of Anarchy—Tyler Cowen
18. Networks, Law and the Paradox of Cooperation—Bryan Caplan and Edward Stringham
19. Conflict, Cooperation and Competition in Anarchy—Tyler Cowen and Daniel Sutter
20. Conventions: Some Thoughts on the Economics of Ordered Anarchy—Anthony De Jasay
21. Can Anarchy Save Us from Leviathan?—Andrew Rutten
22. Government: Unnecessary but Inevitable—Randall Holcombe
23. Is Government Inevitable? Comment on Holcombe’s Analysis—Peter Leeson and Edward Stringham
Section III: History of Anarchist Thought
24. Gustave de Molinari and the Anti-statist Liberal Tradition (excepts)—David Hart
25. Vindication of Natural Society(excerpt)—Edmund Burke
26. The Production of Security—Gustave de Molinari
27. Individualist Anarchism in the United States: The Origins—Murray Rothbard
28. Anarchism and American Traditions—Voltairine de Cleyre
29. On Civil Government—David Lipscomb
30. No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority (excerpt)—Lysander Spooner
31. Trial by Jury—Lysander Spooner
32. Relation of the State to the Individual—Benjamin Tucker
33. Political and Economic Overview—David Osterfeld
Section IV: Historical Case Studies of Non-Government Law Enforcement
34. Are Public Goods Really Common Pools? Considerations of the Evolution of Policing and Highways in England—Bruce Benson
35. Property Rights in Celtic Irish Law—Joseph Peden
36. Private Creation and Enforcement of Law: A Historical Case—David Friedman
37. The Role of Institutions in the Revival of Trade: The Law Merchant, Private Judges, and the Champagne Fairs—Paul Milgrom, Douglass North, and Barry Weingast
38. Legal Evolution in Primitive Societies—Bruce Benson
39. American Experiment in Anarcho-Capitalism: The Not So Wild, Wild West—Terry Anderson and P. J. Hill
40. Order Without Law (excerpt)—Robert Ellickson