Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Acton Institute holds top-ranked conference among free-market think tanks: Forbes
The Acton Institute holds top-ranked conference among free-market think tanks: Forbes
Nov 2, 2025 12:46 AM

As we noted on this blog last month, an independent report has ranked the Acton Institute among the world’s elite think tanks. An analyst at Forbes magazine has narrowed the focus and found that our annual Acton University rated as the highest-rated conference put on by “organizations that favor the free economy.”

The University of Pennsylvania released its “2020 Global Go To Think Tank Index Report” on January 28. “[D]espite certain weaknesses,” this publication – produced by James G. McGann, director of the Lauder Institute’s Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program (TTCSP) at the University of Pennsylvania – “is the only effort to track and quantify the work of think tanks around the globe,” writes Alejandro Chafuen.

Chafuen – who came to serve as Managing Director, International, at Acton Institute after decades in the think tank space – frequently writes on the ways think tanks impact the economic policy conversation. In the premier financial magazine, he notes the sheer number of institutions jockeying to make their perspectives heard:

There are more than 8,200 think tanks in the TTCSP database. Although almost 45,000 people are invited to fill the survey, just under plete at least part of it. Voters include university faculty and administrators, journalists, policy makers, think tank players, and donors. Given the large number of think tanks listed in the main report, in my rankings I focus just on organizations that favor the free economy. This is the sector where I work and that I know best.

Competing against other free-market think tanks – many of which enjoy far greater funding – the Acton Institute performs remarkably well, as his analysis shows:

How do free-market think tanks fare in different categories? In Table 2 I include the leading free-market think tanks in 20 categories. There are many other categories, but free-market think tanks sometimes do not appear in them.

Table 2: Top ranked free-market think tank in 20 different categories. Ranking and categorization by Alejandro Chafuen based on the 2020 Global Go To Think Tank Index Report

ALEJANDRO CHAFUEN

“For those who work in policy research and advocacy centers, think tanks matter,” writes Chafuen, “and thus high rankings or mentions in the Index are important.”

Chafuen fleshes out and humanizes the report’s process by presenting video of the proceedings, which are usually closed to the public under Chatham House rules. He also acknowledges the failures of think tanks to accurately predict Brexit, former President Donald Trump, and the global rise of populism. The antidote, he writes, lies in the advice of New York Times reporter David Sanger, “who cautioned think tanks not to fall into the trap of speaking to themselves”; “to pay attention to ‘we the people’ and not just to elites.”

Over the years, Acton University’s week-long program has immersed more than 8,000 of the most influential leaders across numerous disciplines in the principles of a free and virtuous society. We’re grateful this report underscores the quality of this intensive labor of love and hope it will convince even more leaders of tomorrow (and today) to take part. The best remedy for the bankruptcy of the elites is replacing them with those citizens whom Thomas Jefferson called the “natural aristocracy” of “virtue and talents.”

You can see how the Acton pared in all five categories in which we were honored in this year’s report here. You can read his full article here.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
5 Facts about midterm elections
Tomorrow is Election Day, when citizens of the United States go to the polls to elect a variety of public officials. This year is a midterm election (in contrast to both a Presidential election and “off-year” election years). Here are five facts you should know about midterm elections: 1. Midterm elections are the national elections in the U.S. that occur at the two-year midpoint of a president’s four-year term. Because members of the U.S. House of Representatives are elected for...
Sentimentalism in the Church: a modern epidemic
Involvement in the Christian Church should never be characterized by self-centeredness. Christianity, by definition, is a religion that emphasizes sacrifice and selflessness. However, a recent shift towards religious sentimentalism raises questions about the desire for truth in the modern-day. In his article “A Church drowning in sentimentalism”, Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, writes about the dangerous trend toward sentimentalism in present-day Christianity. Gregg begins by introducing a term for sentimentalism: Affectus per solam, which means: “By Feelings Alone.” Affectus...
Reasons for optimism among Brazil’s conservative Catholics
John Stuart Mill was a prominent public intellectual of the Victorian era. A popular figure in liberal circles, Mill wrote about economics, politics, and society. One of his contemporaries in London was Karl Marx. Marx lived in London at the same time as Stuart Mill did and, according to the historian Gertrude Himmelfarb, the two intellectuals never met despite many overlaps in their works. Successive generations tried to turn Marx into a kind of prophet. Many Western intellectuals continue to...
Bolsonaro versus Brazil’s elites
In his book Sovereignty (1955), the French philosopher Bertrand de Jouvenel observed that one of the significant phenomena in the construction of the modern state was the concentration of the means munication in the hands of a few. The e was an asymmetrical distribution of power. According to De Jouvenel, the more the political power was concentrated in the bureaucracy’s hands, the more inaccessible became the means munication for ordinary people. In this way, much of the media became part...
Luther’s challenge to the conscience of the West
Yesterday was Reformation Day, the 501st anniversary of Martin Luther’s issuing the 95 Theses. Luther’s95 Theses sparked the Protestant Reformation and changed Christianity forever. But the theses has also had an effect on just about every religion in the world. Joseph Loconte explains what the 95 Theses did for religious freedom and how they have contributed to the formation of the ideal of religious liberty in the West: The papal bull of 1520 municating Martin Luther from the Catholic Church...
Unemployment as economic-spiritual indicator — October 2018 report
Series Note: Jobs are one of the most important aspects of a morally functioning economy. They help us serve the needs of our neighbors and lead to human flourishing both for the individual and munities. Conversely, not having a job can adversely affect spiritual and psychological well-being of individuals and families. Because unemployment is a spiritual problem, Christians in America need to understand and be aware of the monthly data on employment. Each month highlight the latest numbers we need...
Video: Margarita Mooney, how socialism warps the human heart
Of all the speeches at the Acton Institute’s 2018 annual dinner, perhaps the one bined the greatest emotional impact and intellectual heft into the fewest minutes came from Margarita Mooney. The associate professor at Princeton Seminary, Acton University alumna, and decades-long visitor munist Cuba gave the invocation after a five-minute-long discussion about how socialism crushes the human spirit, violates personal dignity, and reduces people to selling themselves in prostitution for survival when all other businesses are prohibited. Mooney recounts the...
What you should know about frictional unemployment
Note: This is post #100 in a weekly video series on basic economics. Unemployment is generally harmful to both the economy and to the individual. But there is one type of unemployment that is (mostly) benign, and can even be beneficial: frictional unemployment. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Alex Tabarrok explains why frictional unemployment helps allocate human capital (i.e. workers) to its highest valued use. Even when it’s caused by an event such as a firm going out...
Judges: Parents must pay children’s bills into their 30s
Michael Rotondo rose to infamy earlier this year as the 30-year-old whose parents had to sue in order to evict him from their home. But across Europe, judges have ruled that parents must financially support their children well into their 30s, until they finish schooling – or until they find a job in the same field as their sometimes-esoteric degrees. As I write in a new article at The Stream titled “Judges: Parents Must Pay their Adult Children’s Bills,” the...
This machine trades Halloween candy for Reese’s cups – and teaches us about trade
Have you ever been disappointed by the candy you received from trick-or-treating? Not a sucker for jawbreakers? Think Smarties are dumb? Do Jolly Ranchers leave you sour? You now have two options: Either one will maximize your happiness and benefit others – one of them aiding soldiers overseas. Reese’s has invented a machine that will let you exchange your unwanted Halloween haul for Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups. Simply deposit your “disappointment” in the slot and receive an equivalent bulk of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved