Posts Tagged ‘Boise State’

Assistant Prof. Position: Boise State

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Assistant Professor
American Institutions-Political Thought-Public Law
Department of Political Science

Boise State University invites interested applicants for the position of Assistant Professor.  The successful candidate has a specialty in American Institutions and American political development and may be able to teach upper division courses in political thought and/or public law.

You will have the opportunity to:

  1. Teach upper division courses in American institutions, American political thought, and public law
  2. Teach courses in the PhD program and in the Political Science Department

At a minimum you should have:

  1. PhD in Political Science

The preferred candidate may have:

  1. A strong research record or interest in public policy issues

If you are interested in this position:  Send a cover letter, vita, summary of recent teaching evaluations, written samples of your research, transcripts and three letters of recommendation to:

Scott Yenor
Search Committee Chair
Search #SS-0017-12
Department of Political Science
Boise State University
1910 University Drive
Boise, ID 83725-1935
syenor@boisestate.edu

Review of applications will continue until finalists are identified.

About the University: http://www.boisestate.edu/

About the City of Boise: http://www.boisechamber.org/

About the Department: http://sspa.boisestate.edu/politicalscience/

Political majors at Boise State University have an opportunity to enjoy a unique and challenging educational experience.  The university’s location in the capital city provides many resources not readily available at other schools, including such resources as the state law library, state archives, and state and federal government offices.


As of August 17, 2009, Boise State University is a smoke free campus.
Boise State University is strongly committed to achieving excellence through cultural diversity. The University actively encourages applications and nominations of women, persons of color, and members of other underrepresented groups. EEO/AA Institution, Veterans preference.

New Book on the Modern Family

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Family Politics: The Idea of Marriage in Modern Political Thought

by Scott Yenor, Boise State

With crisp prose and intellectual fairness, Family Politics traces the treatment of the family in the philosophies of leading political thinkers of the modern world. What is family? What is marriage? In an effort to address contemporary society’s disputes over the meanings of these human social institutions, Scott Yenor carefully examines a roster of major and unexpected modern political philosophers from Locke and Rousseau to Hegel and Marx to Freud and Beauvoir. He lucidly presents how these individuals developed an understanding of family in order to advance their goals of political and social reform. Through this exploration, Yenor unveils the effect of modern liberty on this foundational institution and argues that the quest to pursue individual autonomy has undermined the nature of marriage and jeopardizes its future.

Buy it HERE

Review

Family Politics is the pursuit of political philosophy at its best. Enthusiastically recommended not only to scholars but to all who care about the fate of the family in the modern world. –Carson Holloway, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Nebraska, and author of The Way of Life: John Paul II and the Challenge of Liberal Modernity

Jack Miller Fellow writes in USAToday

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Jack Miller Center Fellow, Scott Yenor, appeared in the USA Today in opposition to a call to take politicians out of the redistricting process that takes place after every census. According to the USA Today, non-political commissions like those in Iowa are a better alternative. According to Yenor, changing the current redistricting process would likely make the process all but invisible to the average voter, and perhaps alter our current representative democracy.

From the USA Today

In response to OUR VIEW: Census triggers new round of politicians picking their voters

Opposing view on redistricting: ‘Inescapably political’

By Scott Yenor

Redistricting is inescapably political. It is better to acknowledge this by having the people involved in drawing lines answer to voters than to evade reality by vainly trying to “take redistricting out of politics.”

Those drawing district lines balance several competing objectives. They seek:

•Representation of public opinion and to secure sufficient diversity so that the elected are not beholden to one group.

•Competitiveness and to maintain “compactness” and community interest.

•To ensure a stable political system, while registering changes in public opinion.

Balancing these goods requires political judgment and political accountability that comes with elections.

The effort to “take redistricting out of politics” really means taking accountability out of inherently political decisions. Many legislators would probably be happy to evade their responsibility and kick the question to a commission. Democracies should allow no such evasion.

The high rate of incumbent-party re-election is not due simply to effective gerrymandering, nor is gerrymandering the main cause of political polarization. Incumbents win because they make sure to represent their districts. If our politics has been unusually polarized in recent years, the blame sits with a divided electorate and at the feet of our chief executives who have undertaken bold policy initiatives, not to an excessive number of “safe seats.”

Nor is it clear that legislators elected by commission-drawn lines are more effective than those drawn by legislatures. Is Wisconsin, where the lines are drawn by the legislature, governed worse than New Jersey or California, which had a commission for 1992? There is much more to effective legislation and quality legislators than nominally apolitical districts.

The idea that commissions should draw district lines is the latest effort to find the silver bullet for America’s political ills. What advocates of commissions are frustrated with is really the fact that our representatives are beholden to localities instead of a great national spirit. What they really want is to change the nature of American representation toward a more parliamentary and programmatic government. What they are really after is, in the final analysis, much worse than what we have now.

Professor Scott Yenor, author of Family Politics (forthcoming), is chairman of political science at Boise State University and a fellow with the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America’s Founding Principles and History.

JMC Post-Doctoral Fellowship Initiative Continues to Grow

Thursday, September 30th, 2010


Yale University's Sterling Memorial Library, a...

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Since 2008, The Jack Miller Center Post-Doctoral Fellowship Initiative has become our Flagship program in higher education. This coming year, we and our partners will fund 22 individuals in some of the best undergraduate programs around the country. This effort has been made possible through the support of an anonymous donor, partnerships with other charitable foundations such as the Veritas Fund, and the support of 20 institutions and faculty partners.

A Post-Doctoral Fellowship serves the dual purpose of allowing young professors to continue their graduate education, while beginning the effort to improve and hone their teaching skills. The Jack Miller Center, is proud to facilitate these Post-Doctoral positions. Typically, these positions provide teaching opportunities, while providing valuable time for research and writing.

Dr. Michael Andrews, Vice President of the Jack Miller Center, in announcing the 22 members of the 2010-2011 class of Miller Post-Doctoral Fellows and Visiting Professors commented that “these distinguished young scholars are gaining essential experience in teaching courses that strengthen education in American founding principles and institutions, as well as completing research and writing that will strengthen their careers in higher education.”

Dr. Andrews noted that the Jack Miller Center’s Post-doctoral Fellowship Initiative was established in 2008 through an anonymous $1,000,000 gift.  Since then it has grown through additional support from various supporters and a continuing partnership with the Veritas Fund.  Twenty colleges and universities are participating in this year’s program, and it has become one of the most competitive such programs in the nation.  To date, over 40 young scholars have received support for one or two year appointments.

2010-2011

University of Virginia

  • Jeremiah Russell
  • Matthew Sitman

University of Texas

  • Erik Dempsey

Notre Dame University

  • James Mastrangelo

Yale University

  • Steven Bilakovics
  • A second Miller Fellow to be named in the Spring.

Duke University

  • Randal Hendrickson

Christopher Newport University

  • Jonathan White

Boise State University

  • Stewart Gardner

Lake Forest College

  • Evan Oxman

The Ohio University

  • Patrick Peel

Georgetown University

  • Sarah Houser

Boston College

  • Aaron Herrold

Harvard University

  • Christopher Barker

Emory University

  • James Zink

Rhodes College

  • Brent Cusher

Villanova University

  • Fabrice Beland

Cornell University

  • Kathryn Milne

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Linda Rabieh

Brown University

  • Gregory Weiner

The selection of individuals for these Jack Miller Center Post-Doctoral Fellows and Visiting Professors is made according to the selection process of each individual University and College.

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Hume and the Pathway to Political Moderation

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

A Jack Miller Center Pathway to the Founding Essay

Hume made the famous is-ought distinction

Hume

David Hume (b. 1711) died the year Jefferson penned the Declaration of Independence.  While he may have rolled over in his grave had he seen the theorizing of the American Founders, he was more than a little sympathetic with the goals of American political practice.

On the one hand, in his essays “Of Civil Liberty,”  “Of the Original Contract,” “Of Passive Obedience,” and “Of the Rise and Progress of the Arts and Sciences,” Hume opposed the rise of a rights-based, social contract thinking characteristic of Locke and the Declaration.  Locke’s Second Treatise, Hume writes, was a book “most despicable, both for style and matter.”  Hume’s worry was that “parties from principle, especially abstract speculative principle” would give rise to a dangerous factionalism. Because he criticized such speculative principles and the natural rights foundation of the American republic, the most revolutionary and Whiggish Americans branded Hume a Tory.  Writing of Hume’s magisterial History of England, Jefferson thought Hume had “undermined the free principles of the English Constitution”; Jefferson considered Hume to be a “traitor to his fellow man.”

On the other hand, in his essays such as “Of Commerce” and “Of Refinement in the Arts,” Hume looked forward to the ascension of a more humane, stable politics, and he thought that the advancement of the modern commercial enterprise would help bring such a politics about.  He discerned the importance of such political structures as the separation of powers, the checks and balances, and the extended commercial republic as a means of mitigating the effects of faction and promoting political moderation.  As Americans focused less on the origin of political power and the establishment of popular government and more on the proper exercise of power and the prevention of democratic factionalism, they found Hume an invaluable guide. Hume writes, “there is compass and room enough” in large polities “to refine democracy through representation.”  A society “dispersed in small bodies” is “more susceptible both of reason and order; the force of popular currents and tides is, in a great measure, broken; and the public interest may be pursued with some method and constancy.”  These links between Hume and the American Founders are pursued most persistently in the pioneering work of Douglas Adair, whose Fame and Founding remains the locus classicus of Hume’s influence.

Hume appears hostile to the Declaration, yet a friend of the Constitution.  The question of Hume scholarship concerns how these political aspects of Hume’s thought fit in with his philosophic reflections.  To this day, many have argued that a “philosophical melancholy” led Hume to quite philosophical studies for the world of political essays and history.  In Thomas Reid’s Inquiry into the Human Mind (1764), Hume emerges as a skeptic who destroyed the Enlighenment faith in our ability to apprehend the external world and our ability to guide political practice through reason.  Reid sought to replace Hume’s radical skepticism with a philosophy of common sense.

While Reid’s views were echoed through the years in philosophers such as Immanuel Kant, John Stuart Mill, and T.H Green, during the Twentieth Century scholars have emphasized how Hume himself aligns with a “philosophy of common life” through what Hume himself calls a mitigated skepticism, and this eventually led to the view that Hume’s skepticism prepares the way for his embrace of political moderation.  The “common sense” Hume emerged in a two-step process.  First, Norman Kemp Smith’s Philosophy of David Hume (1941), still the classic study of David Hume, initiated this re-evaluation of Hume’s thought.  Kemp Smith argued that Hume’s skepticism was in the service of what he called naturalism—reason must be subordinated to feelings and instincts if we are to explain the way human beings perceive the world.  Kemp Smith did not detect a link between Hume’s philosophy and his politics.

Second and most decisively, scholars such as Donald Livingston (Hume’s Philosophy of Common Life (1984) and Philosophical Melancholy and Delirium: Hume’s Pathology of Philosophy (1998)), Nicholas Capaldi (Hume’s Place in Moral Philosophy (1989)) and John W. Danford (David Hume and the Problem of Reason (1990)), painted a complete picture of Hume, uniting his philosophic works with his political disposition.  The position of these books, in one way or another, is that Hume’s skepticism served as a preparatory ground for philosophical and political moderation.  He used his skepticism to poke holes in doctrines such as the distinction between primary and secondary qualities or social contract theory in order to prepare people to understand that doctrines and principles do not best explain human life.  Moreover, against Kemp Smith and his followers, this wave of Hume’s scholars show that reason can help to correct the mistakes of instinct and feeling.  What emerges is a Hume whose skepticism is mitigated by feelings and instincts and whose naturalism is mitigated by reason.  Given our complex set of equipment, we would do well not to expect perfection or certainty in politics or philosophy and this explains why Hume defended the institutions of political moderation in the modern world.

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