Francis Boyer Award

The Francis Boyer Award was once the highest honor conferred by the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research. It was named for Francis Boyer, a chief executive at Smith, Kline & French in the mid-twentieth century and a strong supporter of AEI who died in 1972.[1] The Boyer Award was replaced in 2003 by the Irving Kristol Award.

List of recipients

YearRecipientNationalityLecture title
1977Gerald R. Ford American"Toward a Healthy Economy"
1978Arthur F. Burns Austro-Hungarian
 American
"The Condition of the American Economy"
1979Paul Johnson British"The Things That Are Not Caesar's"
1980William J. Baroody Sr. AmericanAward given posthumously
1981Henry Kissinger German
 American
"The Realities of Security"
1982Hanna Holborn Gray American"The Higher Learning and the New Consumerism"
1983Alan Walters British"The British Renaissance, 1979-?"
1984Robert H. Bork American"Tradition and Morality in Constitutional Law"
1985Jeane J. Kirkpatrick American"The United States and the World: Setting Limits"
1986David Packard American"Management of America's National Defense"
1987Paul A. Volcker American"Public Service: The Quiet Crisis"
1988Ronald Reagan American"Freedom and Vigilance"
1989Antonin Scalia American
1990Thomas Sowell American"Cultural Diversity: A World View"
1991Irving Kristol American"The Capitalist Future"
1993Dick Cheney American"Getting Our Priorities Right"
1994Carlos Salinas de Gortari Mexican
1995George F. Will American"The Cultural Contradictions of Conservatism"
1996Alan Greenspan American"The Challenge of Central Banking in a Democratic Society"
1997James Q. Wilson American"Two Nations"
1999Michael Novak American"God's Country: Taking the Declaration Seriously"
2000Christopher DeMuth American"After the Ascent: Politics and Government in the Super-Affluent Society"
2001Clarence Thomas American"Be Not Afraid"
2002Norman Podhoretz American"America at War: The One Thing Needful"

References

  1. "Great American Business Leaders of the Twentieth Century". Harvard Business School. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.