
At a moment when trust in institutions is low and public debate is often dominated by noise, Freedom Frequency provides clarity, grounded in history, scholarship, and evidence. Drawing on the breadth of Hoover’s community (more than one hundred fellows with experience in government, business, academia, law, and public service) this publication offers accessible essays, commentary, and multimedia on the issues that shape America and the world.
Guided by Hoover’s core focus on American leadership, freedom, and institutions, Freedom Frequency explores challenges from national security and economic growth to technological innovation and civic renewal. Each contribution reflects Hoover’s mission: to advance ideas that strengthen liberty, improve governance, and promote peace and prosperity at home and abroad.
Freedom Frequency is a platform for dialogue. It invites readers to engage with Hoover fellows, wrestle with big questions, and discover solutions that can guide policy and leadership in turbulent times. In a fractured information environment, Freedom Frequency stands apart as a trusted source of serious analysis and constructive debate, amplifying ideas that can ensure freedom continues to flourish.
About the Hoover Institution
The Hoover Institution was established in 1919 by Herbert Hoover, a member of Stanford University’s pioneer graduating class of 1895. He created it to collect the records of World War I, the “war to end all wars,” and to guard them for future scholars. Today, the Hoover Institution carries out a dual mission: it is both an active public-policy research center and an internationally recognized library and archives—a resource fully equipped to find, protect, and interpret the historical memory of the digital age.