Hasnas wins Bastiat Prize for article of "Extraordinary concision, wit and relevance" in defence of the rule of law

IPN 
Press release

Teaser: 

Announcing the winner and runners-up in the 2009 Bastiat Prize for Journalism competition.

NEW YORK CITY, 27 October – John Hasnas has won the eighth annual Bastiat Prize for Journalism for “The ‘Unseen’ Deserve Empathy, Too”, published in the Wall Street Journal. Hasnas, a Professor at Georgetown University, utilized Bastiat’s analysis in “What is seen and what is not seen” to explain why judges should base their decisions on the rule of law, not on their “compassion” and “empathy” towards plaintiffs or defendants as President Obama had suggested in appointing Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

At IPN’s Eighth Annual Bastiat Dinner held in New York City on Monday 26 October, Hasnas was presented with US$10,000 – and a crystal candlestick -- from America’s leading satirist, P.J. O’Rourke. After receiving the prize, Hasnas remarked:

“In 1850, Frederic Bastiat stated a simple, important economic truth. In my column, I merely restated that truth and applied it in the context of judicial decision-making. Receiving the Bastiat Prize for doing so caused me to realize that one of the invaluable services that journalists render is to preserve truths discovered in the past and remind us of them in the present when they are needed.”

Judges of the Bastiat Prize this year included Hon. Douglas Ginsburg, of the D.C. Court of Appeals, as well as former winners Amity Shlaes (now with Bloomberg), Brian Carney (Wall Street Journal), and Clive Crook (The Atlantic Monthly and The Financial Times).

The Bastiat Prize was founded in 2001 by International Policy Network (IPN). The Prize recognizes writers who wittily and eloquently explain, promote and defend the principles of the free society.

Commenting on the choice of this year’s winner, Julian Morris, Executive Director of IPN, said, “Like Bastiat, upon whose ideas he draws, Hasnas explains with extraordinary concision, wit and relevance the importance to the free society of law based on clear, abstract principles.”

Second place ($4,000) went to Robert Guest, Washington Correspondent of The Economist. Third place ($1,000) went to Robert Robb, editorial columnist for the Arizona Republic.

The 2009 finalists’ articles are available for download here: http://www.policynetwork.net/sites/default/files/Bastiat-2009-web.pdf

Further information about the Prize is available on IPN’s website: www.policynetwork.net

CONTACT: Marc Sidwell +44 20 3393 8417 (UK),  bastiatprize |AT| policynetwork.net

IPN is a global think tank headquartered in London. IPN seeks to encourage better public understanding of the role of the institutions of the free society in social and economic development, and works with likeminded thinkers and partner organizations in over 70 countries.

John Hasnas receives 2009 Bastiat Prize

Photo: (L-R) Julian Morris (IPN), P.J. O'Rourke presents candlestick to John Hasnas