53 research outputs found
Does classical liberalism imply an evolutionary approach to policy-making?
This paper argues that an evolutionary approach to policy-making, which emphasizes openness to change and political variety, is particularly compatible with the central tenets of classical liberalism. The chief reasons are that classical liberalism acknowledges the ubiquity of uncertainty, as well as heterogeneity in preferences and beliefs, and generally embraces gradual social and economic change that arises from accidental variation rather than deliberate, large-scale planning. In contrast, our arguments cast doubt on a different claim, namely that classical liberalism is particularly compatible with the evolutionary biological heritage of humans
Centers for medicare and medicaid services provider characteristics fail to explain billing variability
The Universality of the Canadian Health Care System in Question: Barriers to Services for Immigrants and Refugees
A 3-State Analysis of Black–White Disparities in Diabetes Hospitalizations Among Medicaid Beneficiaries
The Looming Expansion And Transformation Of Public Substance Abuse Treatment Under The Affordable Care Act
Differences in Health Care Costs and Utilization among Adults with Selected Lifestyle-Related Risk Factors
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