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OUR HISTORY
The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace within Stanford University is
a public policy research center devoted to advanced study of politics, economics, and
political economy—both domestic and foreign—as well as international affairs. Founded
in 1919 by Herbert Hoover, who later became the thirty-first president of the United
States, the Institution originated as a specialized collection of documents on the causes
and consequences of World War I. The collection grew rapidly and soon became one of
the largest archives and most complete libraries in the world devoted to political,
economic, and social change in the twentieth century.
By the late 1940s, the richness of the collection had led to the recruitment of scholars to
use the documents in their work. Expanding its agenda to include specific research
endeavors led to a vast accumulation of knowledge, and the Hoover Institution became
one of the first and most distinguished academic centers in the United States dedicated to
public policy research. Today, with its world-renowned group of scholars and ongoing
programs of policy-oriented research, the Hoover Institution puts its accumulated
knowledge to work as a prominent contributor to the world marketplace of ideas defining
a free society.
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