A Short History of Mises Institute Publishing
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
DIGG THIS
This talk
was delivered at the Mises Institute's Supporters Summit, November
1, 2008, Auburn, Alabama. An MP3 audio version of this talk is available
for download.
Each
year I like to give a roundup of where we stand in terms of publishing
and online resources, and every year I'm struck by how much progress
we've made. And yet this year, there is something astounding to
share with you.
With 300 books
in our catalog, the overwhelming majority of which have been internally
published; with an online store that is second to none in the world
of pro-liberty publishing; with a website delivering nearly 7 terabytes
of data out the door every month to one million unique visitors
per month; with nearly the entire corpus of Mises,
Rothbard,
Hazlitt,
Röpke,
Hayek,
Hutt,
Spadaro, Chodorov,
Nock,
Garrett,
Ron
Paul, John
T. Flynn, Böhm-Bawerk,
Menger,
Bastiat,
Hahn, Say,
and Wicksell,
among many
others, in print and available for free download or purchase
in hardcopy; with the complete run of seven journals online, many
of which would have otherwise sunk without a trace; and with 30,000
rare books in this physical library begging to be scanned; it is
fair to say that the Mises Institute has achieved a level of productivity
and effectiveness that none of us imagined possible in the past.
By the way,
people wonder what 7 terabytes means. To get an idea of how much
that is, this is nearly equivalent to the entire printed collection
of the Library of Congress. Another measure: it is 335,000 trees
made into paper and printed. This is a volume of information in
the material world that would have been inconceivable even a decade
ago. And by delivering digitally, just think of the glorious things
that Mises.org is doing to help the environment! The tree huggers
should love us. That's our kind of recycling.
Many people
write or drop by to ask how this has been accomplished. As with
all endeavors, it has been a matter of tiny steps taken every day
by the staff, along with the willingness of our members and donors
to provide support through faith in the ideals that the Mises Institute
represents.
The guiding
principle of management here can always and everywhere be summed
up in a single principle: generosity. The Mises Institute gives
as much as it can as often as it can.
Read
the rest of the article
November
7, 2008
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2008 Ludwig von Mises Institute
Jeffrey
Tucker Archives
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