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The Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc. (or ISI), is a nonprofit educational organization founded in 1953 by Frank Chodorov with William F. Buckley, Jr. as its first president. ISI supports limited government, individual liberty, personal responsibility, the rule of law, a free-market economy, and traditional values.

ISI claims to educate students in the ideas behind the free market, the American founding, and Western civilization, in order to educate future leaders who will shape American culture through academia, journalism, politics, business, law, and other areas. ISI uses programs intended to supplement a collegiate education and provides access to resources that help achieve an education based primarily on works of influential men and women in the European and Christian traditions.

Christopher G. Long has been the organization's president since 2011.

History
In the early 1950s journalist Frank Chodorov called for a “fifty-year project” to revive the American ideals of individual freedom and personal responsibility “by implanting the idea in the minds of the coming generations.” To that end, in 1953 he founded ISI as the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, with a young Yale University graduate, William F. Buckley Jr., as president. E. Victor Milione, ISI’s next and longest-serving president, was the enterprising individual who realized Chodorov’s plan by developing publications, a membership network, a lecture and conference program, and a graduate fellowship program. Under Milion ISI developed a lot of momentum, and earned recognition when Russell Kirk co-founded one of its publications, Modern Age. The name was changed to the current in 1966.

The University of Chicago Chapter of ISI, was the initial sponsor of the New Individualist Review which reached a national audience of readers between 1961 and 1968. It declared itself “founded in a commitment to human liberty.” Its contributors spanned the libertarian-conservative spectrum.

Over the years, ISI has established itself as a leading conservative educational organization. As historian Lee Edwards observes in Educating for Liberty, a history of ISI during its first fifty years (1953–2003): “ISI is today the educational pillar of the conservative movement and the leading source of information about a free society for the many students and teachers who reject the postmodernist zeitgeist.” President Ronald Reagan said: "By the time the Reagan Revolution marched into Washington, I had the troops I needed—thanks in no small measure to the work with American youth ISI had been doing since 1953. I am proud to count many ISI products among the workhorses of my two terms as President."

Former Reagan administration official T. Kenneth Cribb Jr. served as president of ISI from 1989 until 2011, when current president Christopher G. Long took over. Cribb is credited with expanding ISI's revenue from one million dollars that year to $13,636,005 in 2005. Charity Navigator gives ISI an overall rating of 61,51, which is in the range of "excellent." They note that 84.4% of expenses go to program expenses. In 2010, they gave ISI a 4-star rating for the 7th consecutive year, which is a result only one percent of charities accomplish.

On-Campus Groups and Events
ISI works with thousands of students and faculty members on college campuses across the country. It organizes and mentors campus conservative groups, or “ISI Societies.” These groups are designed to offer intellectual conservative students a forum for discussion and serve as a vehicle for ISI’s campus lectures, debates, and conferences. An example of an ISI-affiliated group isYale's Federalist Party, a member of the Yale Political Union. Groups receive resources from ISI, including books, magazines, journals, financial grants, and mentoring.

ISI also hosts dozens of lectures, debates, conferences, and other events on campuses with prominent conservative speakers and academics. Events discuss themes including Western civilization, political philosophy, economics, literature, technology, and more. Notable events include: a debate between Dr. James Stoner and Dr. Michael Munger on the topic “Is There a Moral Basis for the Free Market?” at Jacksonville State University; a debate between PayPal cofounder Peter Thiel and author George Gilder on “The Prospects for Technology and Economic Growth” at Stanford University;

ISI fights alleged political correctness and liberal bias on collegiate campuses. It holds the yearly "Polly Awards" which sheds media scrutiny on questionable campus events across the nation.

Leadership Conferences
ISI steers its brightest and most talented students into high-level leadership development programs. The organization hosts weekend Regional Leadership Conferences for talented undergraduates throughout the school year. In addition, each summer it hosts a number of weeklong conferences.

ISI’s most selective leadership program for undergraduates is the Honors Program, founded in 1995. Open to undergraduates in all disciplines, the Honors Program offers the best and brightest students the opportunity to study the roots of Western civilization with top professors.

Each year, ISI selects sixty Honors Scholars from a national pool of applicants. The yearlong program begins with a weeklong summer conference. That intellectual retreat consists of lectures and small-group seminars led by ISI professors from the humanities, social sciences, and arts. The 2013–14 ISI Honors Program Summer Conference was held in Richmond, Virginia, on the theme “Rights and Duties.” The 2014–15 class of Honors Scholars will be divided into two summer conferences, one held in Richmond and the other in Seabeck, Washington; those conferences will focus on “The Traditions of Liberty.”

Each Honors Scholar is paired with a professor, and throughout the following school year the Honors Scholars engage in an independent course of study on the free society with their faculty mentors. In addition, they participate in weekend seminars that ISI runs in partnership with Liberty Fund.

Collegiate Network Student Newspapers
ISI’s student journalism program, the Collegiate Network (CN), sponsors and mentors independent newspapers on approximately sixty college campuses. Publications in the CN include the Dartmouth Review and the Stanford Review. ISI provides financial and technical assistance as well as advice to student editors on layout, advertising, fund-raising, and other matters. ISI also runs training conferences where student editors learn directly from professional journalists. These weekend-long training seminars include Start the Presses, for students planning to launch new publications, and the Editors Conference, an annual event for top editors at the CN’s member publications.

The Collegiate Network awards an William F. Buckley Award annual to the writer of the best campus-focused article published in all CN publications that year.

ISI also runs a summer internship and an yearlong fellowship program that give student journalists their start in the professional media.

Alumni
Alumni of ISI and its Collegiate Network student journalism program include:


 * Samuel Alito, U.S. Supreme Court justice
 * Richard V. Allen, national security advisor to President Ronald Reagan
 * Hadley Arkes, Ney Professor in American Institutions at Amherst College
 * Larry Arnn, president of Hillsdale College
 * Elizabeth Bramwell, former president of the Bramwell Growth Fund
 * Matthew Continetti, editor in chief of the Washington Free Beacon
 * Ann Coulter, bestselling author and columnist
 * Ross Douthat, New York Times columnist
 * Edwin J. Feulner Jr., founder of the Heritage Foundation
 * Mike George, president of QVC
 * Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University
 * John C. Goodman, president of the National Center for Policy Analysis
 * Stephen F. Hayes, senior writer at the Weekly Standard
 * Steven F. Hayward, visiting scholar in conservative thought at the University of Colorado
 * Laura Ingraham, bestselling author and syndicated radio host
 * Jonathan Karl, ABC News senior White House correspondent
 * John F. Lehman Jr., secretary of the navy under President Ronald Reagan, chairman of J. F. Lehman & Company
 * Rich Lowry, editor of National Review
 * Katherine Mangu-Ward, managing editor of Reason magazine
 * Harvey Mansfield, professor of government at Harvard University
 * Eugene Meyer, president of the Federalist Society
 * Richard Miniter, bestselling author
 * Ramesh Ponnuru, senior editor at National Review
 * Joseph Rago, Pulitzer Prize–winning editorialist at the Wall Street Journal
 * Antonin Scalia, U.S. Supreme Court justice
 * Matthew Spalding, author and associate vice president at Hillsdale College
 * Heath Tarbert, associate counsel to President George W. Bush
 * Terry Teachout, author and critic
 * Peter Thiel, PayPal cofounder
 * Marc Thiessen, bestselling author and Washington Post columnist
 * Laura Vanderkam, author and USA Today contributor
 * }
 * Marc Thiessen, bestselling author and Washington Post columnist
 * Laura Vanderkam, author and USA Today contributor
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ISI Books and Publications
ISI’s magazine, the Intercollegiate Review, is sent to student members free of charge twice per year. ISI also publishes the quarterly journal Modern Age. Until 2012, the semi-annual journal The Political Science Reviewer was published by ISI. It has also published Continuity: A Journal of History.

The Intercollegiate Studies Institute also operates ISI Books, which publishes books on the humanities, the foundations of the American republic, Western civilization, and conservative thought.

ISI Books publishes approximately five new titles annually and offers a selection of more than two hundred books.