Da lista, as minhas sugestões, vão para:
1. "The Ethics of Liberty", Murray N. Rothbard:
"the most comprehensive presentation and defense of a libertarian law code yet written. Grounded in the tradition of natural law and in its style of axiomatic-deductive reasoning, Rothbard explains the concepts of human rights, self-ownership, original appropriation, contract, aggression, and punishment. He demonstrates the moral unjustifiability of the state, and offers smashing refutations of prominent limited-statist libertarians such as L. v. Mises, F. A. Hayek, I. Berlin, and R. Nozick."
2. "Power and Market", Murray N. Rothbard
"is the most comprehensive theoretical analysis of the inefficiencies and counterproductive effects of every conceivable form of government interference with the market, from price controls, compulsory cartels, anti-trust laws, licenses, tariffs, child labor laws, patents, to any form of taxation (including Henry George's proposed "single tax" on ground land)."
3. "Democracy – The God That Failed", Hans-Hermann Hoppe
"Hoppe compares monarchy favorably to democracy, but criticizes both as ethically and economically inefficient, and advocates a natural order with competitive security and insurance suppliers. He revises fundamental orthodox historical interpretations, and reconsiders central questions of libertarian strategy. "
4. "The Economics and Ethics of Private Property", Hans-Hermann Hoppe
"includes Hoppe's axiomatic defense of the principle of self-ownership and original appropriation: anyone arguing against these principles is involved in a performative or practical contradiction."
5. "The Myth of National Defense", Hans-Hermann Hoppe
"is a collection of essays by an international assembly of social scientists concerning the relationship between State and war and the possibility of non-statist property defense: by militias, mercenaries, guerrillas, protection-insurance agencies, etc"
6. "The Structure of Liberty", Randy E. Barnett's [Extraordinário para juristas influenciados por Hayek]
"is an outstanding discussion of the requirements of a liberal-libertarian society from the viewpoint of a lawyer and legal theorist. Heavily influenced by F.A. Hayek, Barnett uses the term "polycentric constitutional order" for anarcho-capitalism."
7. "The Enterprise of Law", Bruce L. Benson's
"is the most comprehensive empirical-historical study of anarcho-capitalism. B. provides abundant empirical evidence for the efficient operation of market-produced law and order. Benson's sequel To Serve and Protect is likewise to be recommended."
8. "The Machinery of Freedom", David D. Friedman's
"presents the utilitarian case for anarcho-capitalism: brief, easy to read, and with many applications from education to property protection."
Artigos:
Barnett, Randy E., Whither Anarchy? Has Robert Nozick Justified the State?, 1,1.
------, Toward a Theory of Legal Naturalism, 2, 2.
Benson, Bruce L., Enforcement of Private Property Rights in Primitive Societies, 9,1.
-----, Customary Law with Private Means of Resolving Disputes and Dispensing Justice, 9,2.
-----, Reciprocal Exchange as the Basis for Recognition of Law, 10, 1.
-----, Restitution in Theory and Practice, 12, 1.
"Congenial Writings":
1. "Secession, State, and Liberty", David Gordon's
"is a collection of essays by contemporary philosophers, economists, and historians in defense of the right to secession."
2. "Law, Legislation, and Liberty", Friedrich A. Hayek, Vol. I
"is an important study on the "spontaneous" evolution of law, and the distinction of law versus legislation and between private and public law. "
3. "On Power", Bertrand de Jouvenel,
"is an outstanding account of the growth of state power, with many important insights concerning the role of the aristocracy as defender of liberty and mass democracy as a promoter of state power. Related, and likewise to be recommended is his Sovereignty."
4. "The Quest for Community", Robert Nisbet
"(formerly published under the more descriptive title Community and Power) explains the protective function of intermediate social institutions, and the tendency of the state to weaken and destroy these institutions in order to gain total control over the isolated individual."
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