In 2003, Livingston founded the Abbeville Institute. Abbeville Institute scholars have promoted the
Lost Cause myth, contending that the American Civil War was "not about slavery." The Institute is named for the town of
Abbeville, South Carolina, often regarded as the birthplace of the
Confederacy. The Institute adopted as part of its mission statement the following by slavery historian
Eugene Genovese: "Rarely these days, even on Southern campuses, is it possible to acknowledge the achievements of white people in the South"; As of 2009, the Abbeville Institute had a total of 64 associated scholars from various colleges and disciplines. It operates an annual summer school for graduate students and an annual scholars' conference. It focuses particularly on issues of secession, which its scholars believe is a topic excluded from mainstream academia. In 2010, it held a conference on secession and nullification. Notable faculty include
Thomas DiLorenzo and
Clyde Wilson. The Abbeville Institute has a press, an Abbeville Institute Review, and a blog. ==Books==