SAN ANGELO, TX — Dr. Alexandre Padilla, director of the Exploring Economic Freedom Project at Metropolitan State University of Denver, will give a special guest presentation at Angelo State University on Tuesday, Oct. 10, at 5:30 p.m. in the Houston Harte University Center, 1910 Rosemont Drive.
Sponsored by the Texas Tech University Free Market Institute at Angelo State University, Padilla's presentation will take place in the University Center's C.J. Davidson Conference Center and is free and open to the public.
In his presentation titled "Are Immigrants a Threat to the Citadel of Liberty?," Padilla will discuss how immigration has consistently been a contentious issue in the United States, with concerns about immigrants and their impact on the nation's economic and political institutions dating back to pre-revolutionary times. He will also explore the core assumptions that critics of immigration hold, and examine empirical literature on the subject to address the question of whether immigrants are a threat to the citadel of liberty.
Also a professor and chair of the Economics Department at MSU-Denver, Padilla teaches microeconomics, law and economics, applied economic policy, and the political economy of immigration. His most recent research on immigration and on populism has been published in various journals, including Constitutional Political Economy, Independent Review, International Trade Journal, Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, and Journal of Private Enterprise.
As director of the Exploring Economic Freedom Project, Padilla oversees its primary mission to educate students and the business and broader communities about the role of economic and political freedom in promoting entrepreneurship, economic growth, prosperity and peace - and to provide a forum for interdisciplinary discussions on issues broadly discussed in academic, intellectual and public policy circles.
The TTU Free Market Institute at ASU aims to advance research and teaching related to the free enterprise system and the institutional environment necessary for it to function well, and to support the missions of the ASU Norris-Vincent College of Business. The institute also develops and operates student and public programming for the benefit of ASU students and the San Angelo community.
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