The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research is dedicated to preserving and strengthening the foundations of freedom —; government, private enterprise, vital cultural and political institutions, and a strong foreign policy and national defense —; scholarly research, open debate, and publications. Founded in 1943 and located in Washington, D.C., AEI is one of America's largest and most respected "think tanks." AEI research covers economics and trade; social welfare; government tax, spending, regulatory, and legal policies; U.S. politics; international affairs; and U.S. defense and foreign policies. The Institute publishes dozens of books and hundreds of articles and reports each year, and an influential policy magazine, The American Enterprise. AEI publications are distributed widely to government officials and legislators, business executives, journalists, and academics; its conferences, seminars, and lectures are regularly covered by national television. The Institute's fifty resident scholars and fellows include some of America's foremost economists, legal scholars, political scientists, and foreign policy experts. The resident faculty is augmented by a network of more than one hundred adjunct scholars at universities and policy institutes throughout the United States and abroad. AEI scholars testify frequently before congressional committees, provide expert consultation to all branches of government, and are cited and reprinted in the national media more often than those of any other think tank. AEI is governed by a twenty-six member Board of Trustees, composed of leading business and financial executives, and its research agenda and appointments are reviewed by a Council of Academic Advisers, a group of distinguished outside scholars. The Institute is an independent, nonprofit organization supported primarily by grants and contributions from foundations, corporations, and individuals. AEI is strictly nonpartisan and takes no institutional positions on pending legislation or other policy questions.
Bush Is Right on Global Warming
Sallie L. Baliunas, James K. Glassman, June 2001Forget Kyoto
James K. Glassman, January 2001Ozone and the Constitution at EPA
Christopher DeMutt, Randall Lutter, July 1999Polluted Polling on Global Warming
Karlyn Bowman, March 1998Global Environmentalists and Their Superstitions
Nicholas Eberstadt, February 1998Greenhouse Politics
Jeremy Rabkin, November 1997The EPA's Killer Air Pollution Proposals
Michael Fumento, October 1997Reducing Global Emissions at Minimum Cost
Irwin Stelzer, August 1997Conference Summary
John D. Dingell, Timothy Wirth, May 1997