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''Inquiry'' was a libertarian magazine published from November 1977 to 1984. It was originally published by the Cato Institute, then later transferred to the Libertarian Review Foundation. ==History== ''Inquiry'' was originally founded as part of the Cato Institute, in an effort by libertarian political donors Charles Koch and Ed Crane to build public policy institutions for the libertarian movement. Williamson Evers was its first editor. After Evers was ousted as editor in a dispute with Crane, Glenn Garvin took over in 1980. Doug Bandow served as editor from 1982 until the magazine's closure in 1984. At different points in its history, its editorial staffers included Jonathan Marshall, Mark Paul, Ralph Raico, and Jack Shafer. Its poetry editor was Dana Gioia. In the early 1980s, Koch and Crane grew dissatisfied with the publishing efforts they supported, which included ''Inquiry'' and the ''Libertarian Review''. They decided stop publishing the ''Libertarian Review'' and move ''Inquiry'' from the Cato Institute to the control of the separately-managed Libertarian Review Foundation at the beginning 1982. With the May 1982 issue, ''Inquiry'' was retitled ''Inquiry: A Libertarian Review''. The magazine's circulation had always been low and had declined below 10,000. Citing financial concerns, Koch and Crane closed the magazine in 1984.〔 The magazine originally was published biweekly from 1977 to 1978, then switched to semi-monthly, with about 20 issues per year in its first four and a half years of publication. In 1982 it switched to monthly publication, then went to 10 issues a year in 1984. The final issue was published in July 1984. During its run, it made available bound collections of issues from its first four volumes (77-78, 78-79, 79-80, 80-81). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Inquiry (magazine)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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