Daniel J. D’Amico is the inaugural director of the Stephenson Institute for Classical Liberalism founded in 2021 and an associated faculty member at Wabash College. The Stephenson Institute is a student-focused resource center dedicated to investigating questions related to personal responsibility, individual rights, freedom of speech, and the essential role of liberty in a free society.
Prior to 2022 Professor D’Amico was the Associate Director of The Political Theory Project and Lecturer in Economics at Brown University where he taught and coordinated student programs dedicated to the study of institutions and ideas that make societies free, prosperous, and fair. Prior to arriving at Brown in 2015, Daniel was awarded the level of Associate Professor of economics at Loyola University New Orleans, where he garnered awards for teaching, research and service.
Daniel earned his doctoral degree in economics from George Mason University in 2008. His dissertation, “The Imprisoner’s Dilemma: The Political Economy of Proportionate Punishment,” was awarded the Israel M. Kirzner Award for best dissertation in Austrian Economics by the Society for the Development of Austrian Economics. In 2011 Daniel's paper, “The Prison in Economics: Private and Public Incarceration in Ancient Greece,” was awarded the Gordon Tullock Prize for the best paper published in the journal Public Choice by a scholar under the age of forty.
Daniel’s current research is focused upon the applied political economy of punishment and incarceration throughout history and around the world. He has published over 20 journal articles in a variety of scholarly outlets across academic disciplines including but not limited to Public Choice, the Journal of Comparative Economics, the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organizations, the Journal of Institutional Economics, and Public Affairs Quarterly. Daniel is currently the co-editor of Advances in Austrian Economics, a fellow with the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, an affiliated scholar with the workshop in Politics, Philosophy and Economics at George Mason University. He is a cofounder of the Carl Menger Essay Contest.
Dr. Ammons' research focuses on the intersection of economics, political institutions, and social movements, with a particular emphasis on nonviolent action and revolutionary change. Dr. Ammons earned his Ph.D. in Economics from George Mason University in 2024, where he also served as a Graduate Lecturer.
His work has been published in journals such as World Development Perspectives, Public Choice, and the Journal of Markets and Morality. Dr. Ammons is passionate about exploring how economic principles can shed light on social and political phenomena, including the institutional effects of revolutions, the relationship between nonviolent action and market processes, and the role of constitutional entrepreneurship in shaping societies. Outside of his academic pursuits, Dr. Ammons resides in Ladoga, Indiana with his wife and two children.
Nicholas Jensen is a postdoctoral scholar-in-residence at the Stephenson Institute. His primary research interests include public choice economics, the history of economic thought, law & economics, and crime economics. Most of his research broadly falls into two categories. The first category explores the effects of legal institutions, public policy interventions, and their effects on both criminal justice and economic outcomes. The latter part of his research in the history of economic thought explores the intellectual contributions of economists and political philosophers, and their relevance to economic thought today.
Eric Wilhelm has worked in both the private and public sectors: first, as a statistician at the Bureau of Labor Statistics and, most recently, as a tax economist for PwC LLP’s national office in Washington, DC. He has many first-hand accounts of the public policy ecosystem in the US capital as well as practical knowledge of “how the sausage gets made.” Feel free to ask him about it.
During his time in the DMV (DC, Maryland & Virginia), Eric received a Masters in Applied Economics at Johns Hopkins University before graduating with a PhD in Economics at George Mason University. His research covers topics in North American and European economic history, urban growth, spatial economics, and public finance. Eric is currently building off research featured in his dissertation about the rise and spread of craft guilds in late medieval and early modern Europe. He has compiled and added to a growing database on craft-guild presence for over 1,400 European cities and explored their relationship with urban growth.
You’ll find Eric reading books and papers on economic history, spinning circles over time series econometrics, or, preferably, hiking, kayaking, and playing tennis.
The Institute sponsors events that bring thought leaders to the Wabash campus, engaging students and the wider community. See Upcoming Events.
The Institute supports students pursuing summer internships with national and international public-policy organizations aligned with its mission. Learn More.
The Institute was founded by Wabash alumnus Richard J Stephenson '62, a philanthropist and entrepreneur who is committed to a free society. Learn More.
Drawing on the experience of legendary Wabash trustee Pierre Goodrich and Economics Professor Benjamin Rogge, the Stephenson Institute celebrates Wabash's tradition of exploring ideas over ideology. Learn More.
As part of a long tradition of building free societies, including principles such as individual choice and constitutionalism, some perennial ideas about liberty resonate–from the Founding Era to our own. Learn More.
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