Katana VentraIP

Liberty Fund

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a nonprofit foundation[2] headquartered in Carmel, Indiana, which promotes the libertarian views of its founder, Pierre F. Goodrich through publishing, conferences, and educational resources. The operating mandate of the Liberty Fund was set forth in an unpublished memo written by Goodrich "to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals".[3][4][5][2]

Founded

1960 (1960)

Educational

  • 11301 N. Meridian Street, Carmel, IN 46032

Publishing, conferences

History[edit]

Liberty Fund was founded by entrepreneur Pierre F. Goodrich in 1960. Goodrich, "one of the richest men in Indiana", was involved with coal mines, corn production, telecommunications, and securities.[6] Goodrich was a member of the neoliberal or classically liberal Mont Pelerin Society, an international organization of academics, intellectuals, and business leaders who advocated free market economic policies. Goodrich was also an acolyte of Austrian School economist Ludwig von Mises.[7] Historian Donald T. Critchlow notes that Liberty Fund was one of the endowed conservative foundations which laid the way for the election of U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1980.[8]


In 1997 it received an $80 million donation from Goodrich's wife, Enid, increasing its assets to over $300 million.[5][9] In November 2015, it was announced that the Liberty Fund was building a $22 million headquarters in Carmel, Indiana.[6][10]

Liberty Fund's Natural Law and Enlightenment Series

's Democracy in America (Historical-Critical Edition) ISBN 9780865978409[11]

Alexis de Tocqueville

The Works and Correspondence of (Glasgow Edition) ISBN 9780865973695

Adam Smith

The Works and Correspondence of (Edited by Piero Sraffa and Maurice Dobb, 2005) ISBN 9780865979765

David Ricardo

Reception[edit]

In his book The Assault on Reason, former U.S. Vice President and presidential candidate Al Gore wrote that between 2002 and 2004, 97% of the attendees at Liberty Fund training seminars for judges were Republican administration appointees. Gore suggests that such conferences and seminars are one of the reasons that judges who regularly attend such conferences "are generally responsible for writing the most radical pro-corporate, antienvironmental, and activist decisions". Referring to what he calls the "Big Three"—the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment, George Mason University's Law & Economics Center, and the Liberty Fund—Gore adds, "These groups are not providing unbiased judicial education. They are giving multithousand-dollar vacations to federal judges to promote their radical right-wing agenda at the expense of the public interest."[22]

Economic liberalism

Libertarian conservatism

Libertarianism in the United States

Right-libertarianism

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

(provided by RePEc)

EDIRC listing