

Cato Podcast
Cato Institute
Each week on Cato Podcast, leading scholars and policymakers from the Cato Institute delve into the big ideas shaping our world: individual liberty, limited government, free markets, and peace. Whether unpacking current events, debating civil liberties, exploring technological innovation, or tracing the history of classical liberal thought, we promise insightful analysis grounded in rigorous research and Cato’s signature libertarian perspective. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Top mentioned books
Here are the most frequently recommended books on the Cato Podcast:
#1 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The Triumph of Fear

#2 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The Cult of the Presidency

#3 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Price of Everything
A Parable of Possibility and Prosperity
#4 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The tyranny of silence
#5 Mentioned in 1 episodes
None of My Business
P.J. Explains Money, Banking, Debt, Equity, Assets, Liabilities, and Why He's Not Rich and Neither Are You
#6 Mentioned in 1 episodes
From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State

#7 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Fallacy of Campaign Finance Reform

#8 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Crisis of Dependency
How Our Efforts to Solve Poverty Are Trapping People in It and What We Can Do to Foster Freedom Instead.

#9 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The 1619 Project

#10 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The road to serfdom

#11 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The libertarian mind
A Manifesto for Freedom
#12 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Individualists

#13 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Democracy in America
#14 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Fractured Schoolhouse

#15 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Cross Purposes
Christianity's Broken Bargain with Democracy

#16 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Justice Abandoned

#17 Mentioned in 1 episodes
God and man at Yale
the superstitions of "academic freedom"

#18 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Le Miserable
Slavery isn't over

#19 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Rhetorical Presidency
#20 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Conductor
The Story of Reverend John Rankin, Abolitionism's Essential Founding Father