Posts Tagged ‘Steven Smith’

The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions is an interdisciplinary pilot program, established, with the support of the Jack Miller Center, for the purpose of developing the study of the theory and practice of representative government in the Anglo-American tradition. It is jointly hosted by the Departments of History and Political Science and co-directed by Professors Steven Smith (Political Science) and Keith Wrightson (History). Danilo Petranovich (Ph.D., Political Science) is the Jack Miller Center Lecturer.

There is a long tradition of studies of this nature at Yale University. The Center for Parliamentary History (1966-2007) edited and published the proceedings of 17th-century English parliaments. The source materials collected at the Center remain available to scholars and students. Yale’s Libraries: the Sterling Memorial Library, the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Lewis Walpole Library and the Law Library have very extensive holdings of direct relevance to the field.

The long-term mission of the program is to revitalize and extend the study of the theory and practice of modern constitutionalism in the Anglo-American tradition. These fields have been reduced in significance by shifts of concern and of methodology in both departments of history and of political science. Undergraduates exhibit an eagerness to engage with these matters, but it is inadequately catered for in contemporary academic programs. The aim of this program is to feed that healthy interest by re-examining the intersection of ideas, institutions, and political practice in the emergence of modern constitutional democracy, and thereby to further a political education that is both broadly conceived, and at the same time rigorous and critical.

We hope that the pilot program will stimulate a level of interest and support that might facilitate the establishment of a Center for the Study of Representative Government providing permanent institutional representation for this field of study, and that might include a base for visiting scholars working in this field, who would in turn contribute to an ongoing engagement with issues central to the health of our own political society.

About the Program

The last generation has seen a significant decline in the teaching of constitutional history in American universities.  In particular, courses focused on the development of the theory and practice of constitutional government between the Founding and the Civil War have lost the central place which they once had in the historical curriculum. At the same time, the study of the constitutional history of early modern Britain, which once provided an essential prologue to the foundation of the American Republic, has become a rarity.  This shift in academic concern constitutes a significant cultural loss. Students increasingly lack the opportunity to study, at a high level, the deep roots of their own political culture, and indeed the most powerful intellectual and institutional influences on the development of representative and democratic government worldwide.

The aim of this program is to reassert the centrality of these issues in the teaching of history and politics.  Our goal is not simply to restore an older historical tradition, but rather to challenge and extend that tradition with new questions.  These questions will focus on the origins, development and diffusion of a political culture that emerged in England during the Civil War and “Glorious Revolution,” was transmitted to America during the 17th and 18th centuries, transformed and extended by the American Revolution and tested in the American Civil War, fought in part to determine (in Abraham Lincoln’s phrase) whether a nation “conceived in liberty” and “dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal” could long endure.

We regard the political, intellectual, and constitutional developments which took place in Britain and America between the 17th and the mid-19th centuries as of singular and enduring importance.  The founders of the American Republic knew themselves to have a deep legal and constitutional inheritance. The vocabulary and concepts used by the framers of the American Constitution have a direct link with those of the seventeenth-century English parliamentarians and legal and political theorists who defended the rule of law and the liberties of the subject and ultimately challenged and contained monarchical authority.  The American Founders, however, did more than draw upon this inherited political culture.  In the first Federalist Paper Alexander Hamilton wrote:

It has been frequently remarked that it seems to have been reserved to the people of this country, by their conduct and example, to decide the important question, whether societies of men are really capable or not of establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether they are forever destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and force.

The Federalist authors considered themselves as not just inheriting a tradition, but transforming it.  A representative government based upon claims to certain inalienable rights and deriving its sovereignty from “we the people” created the possibility of the development of truly democratic government, and the transmission of the ideal (and eventual practice) of government “of the people, by the people, for the people” back to Europe and to a larger world gave the American experiment a central place in the political discourse of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

At the core of our program will thus be a series of questions:  what was borrowed and what was left behind when the British inheritance was transplanted to the New World?  What are the areas of continuity and discontinuity between the British and American legal and constitutional traditions?  What did the American Founders mean in their claim to establish a “new order of the ages” (novus ordo seclorum)?  What were some of the original rationales for the idea of representative government as well as for a written constitution?  What were the philosophical, constitutional, political, and social foundations of toleration, especially religious toleration, in Anglo-American law?  What tensions existed between constitutional government as conceived by those who shaped the British Revolutions of the seventeenth century, or the American Founding which extended that tradition, and the emergence of mass democracy in the 19th century?  Did Abraham Lincoln help to restore the American republic to its original foundations or did he inaugurate a new kind of democratic experiment that is still reverberating in politics and law?  What does British democracy, and the post-colonial constitutions modeled upon it in former British possessions owe to the influence of the American democratic example? What influence have both had on the political institutions of the contemporary world, and how successfully have their ideals and practices been adapted to differing cultural contexts? Can their claims to universality be sustained?

These are just some – by no means all – of the types of question we hope to explore in this new program.  Our purpose is not to supply pat answers to such questions but to encourage the serious study of how these ideas, and the institutions to which they gave rise were developed in their time, and how their influence has extended over time. This is an exciting story in itself. It is the more exciting because it remains an unfinished story.  What is the future of constitutional government and representative democracy as it faces the challenge of a new century?  Can ideas and institutions developed to handle problems peculiar to their historical time still apply in a very different world?

The program involves:

  • Two post-doctoral fellowships (each for a period of two years), one held in the Department of History, the other in the Department of Political Science.  These posts are intended to advance the careers of exceptional young scholars engaged in research projects bearing upon the central purposes of the program.
  • Each of the fellows will offer, in each year of the fellowship, a seminar course on a theme related to the program.  These courses will be cross-listed in the departments of History and Political Science, and are intended to enhance immediately the opportunities of students to study these issues.
  • The fellows will cooperate with associated Yale faculty in the mounting of symposia or short conferences that will bring together Yale faculty, the Miller Center Post-Docs, and invited scholars within the region or nationally.
  • Four distinguished speakers will be invited to Yale each year to present public lectures on relevant themes: two historians and two political scientists each year.
  • Small research grants will be provided to undergraduates and graduate students to encourage original research on relevant topics.

Taken as a whole these elements of the program are intended to encourage research, advance the careers of young scholars, provide teaching, and extend the public discussion of the key issues. In sum they will create a forum for the study of representative institutions in historical context.

Steven Smith Joins JMC Academic Council

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

Steven Smith

Steven Smith

Steven Smith received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.  He has taught at Yale since 1984 and is the Alfred Cowles Professor of Political Science and has been Master of Branford College since 1996.  He has served as Director of Graduate Studies in Political Science, Director of the Special Program in the Humanities, and Acting Chair of Judaic Studies.  His research has focused on the history of political philosophy with special attention to the problem of the ancients and moderns, Jewish philosophy, and theories of constitutional democracy.

His best known publications include Hegel’s Critique of Liberalism (1989), Spinoza, Liberalism, and Jewish Identity (1997), Spinoza’s Book of Life (2003), Reading Leo Strauss (2006), and most recently The Cambridge Companion to Leo Strauss (2009).  He is currently working on a book dealing with the statecraft and political thought  of Abraham Lincoln.  In his future work he hopes to focus on the political thought of the Bible and the literature of the Jewish-American experience.

He has received several academic awards and prizes, but is most proud of receiving the Lex Hixon ‘63 Prize for Teaching Excellence in the Social Sciences in 2009.  He is a die-hard Yankees fan and hopes to be able to play for the team in the next life.

Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions: Inaugural

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Introductory Remarks at the Reception for the JMC Partner Program

By Professor Steven Smith

March 25, 2011

A very warm welcome to everyone here today for the inauguration of Yale’s Center for the Study of Representative Institutions. My name is Steven B. Smith and I am – along with Keith Wrightson – the Co-Director of this new program.

I would like to say just a word about what I hope we might accomplish but before doing so I want to recognize some very special guests who came all the from New York, Philadelphia, and as far away as Chicago to be with us here today.

First among them is Mr. Thomas Klingenstein. It was largely through Mr. Klingenstein’s generosity that we have this program at all. It is due to him and people like him, that is, people with both the financial resources and with the deep and sustained intellectual interest in history and political ideas that programs like this can exist at all. Thank you very much indeed.

Second, I would like to recognize Mr. and Mrs. Jack and Goldie Miller who have founded Jack Miller Centers at a number of university campuses around the country. It is an honor for us to be part of the Jack Miller family (so to speak). Due to Mr. Miller’s passionate interest in American history and the founding principles of American government we have been able to move this program forward from a number of preliminary conversations to what we hope will be a flourishing center for undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty members with serious interests in the Anglo-American political tradition.

I also want to acknowledge the tireless work and assistance offered to us by Admiral Mike Ratliffe, Pamela Edwards, and Mike Andrews from the JMC in Philadelphia without whose help we never could have come as far as we have.

Last summer Keith and Tom Klingenstein, and I met for an exploratory lunch at the Yale Club in NY and I remember Tom asking us with some of the skepticism and common sense of the business man: Why do you want to do this? I want to briefly address this point.

For too long the engagement with the study of American founding ideas and institutions has lost the pride of place it once held in the university curriculum. Students at even our best universities can graduate without taking courses in the basic structure of American government, the history of the founding period, or to read fundamental texts like Locke’s Second Treatise of Government, the Federalist Papers, or the speeches and writings of other major figures of the tradition of constitutional government from Burke to Lincoln. By focusing on the development of representative democracy in the Anglo-American world from the period between the mid-17th to the mid-19th centuries we hope to begin the renewal of a serious confrontation and debate about our constitutional tradition.

Our purpose – at least as I understand it – will not be simply to glorify or celebrate this tradition but to put it to the test, to ask of it a series of questions: what were the sources – intellectual, political, social – of the Constitution and the rule of law? Did the American Founding represent a break from the old order – the creation of a novus ordo seclorum – or was it largely continuous with an older English parliamentary heritage going as far back as Magna Carta? Was the Constitution a device for limiting democracy or expanding it? How did the legacy of slavery affect the founders’ vision? And did Lincoln initiate a new founding, a “second American revolution” as it were, and how did this both draw upon but enhance the vision of the Founders?

These questions may in turn prompt others of a more theoretical nature: just what is representative democracy and how does it differ from other kinds of political regimes? Should representatives be considered as mirroring the interests and desires of their consituencies or as leaders who owe their constituents their independent judgment? What is the role of executive authority and political parties in a representative democracy?

One aspect of the program that I am especially looking forward to is a closer association between the History and Political Science Departments. For too long now historians have neglected the stuff of political history in order to focus on the more fashionable areas of social and cultural history; and for too long political scientists have forsaken the crucial study of political ideas in order to construct elaborate models of the micro-foundations of political behavior. Our plan is to help facilitate a greater conversation between our disciplines in order to bring out interrelationships between political history and political theory, to show how political ideas and political institutions are not two parallel histories but part and parcel of same enterprise.

These are just some of the issues that our new program will focus on.

And the best news is that Yale has the kind of deep intellectual resources that will allow us to explore these questions. The new Center will initiate a new and fruitful collaboration between the departments of History and Political Science. It will draw on wide range of Yale faculty members who have already expressed enthusiasm about the creation of this new program. I am thinking especially of people like Joanne Freeman, Harry Stout, and Steven Pincus in History, Bryan Garsten, David Mayhew, and Stephen Skowronek in Political Science, Bruce Ackerman and Akeel Amaar in the Law School, and David Bromwich and Claude Rawson from the English Department.

The most important reason, though, we are so enthusiastic about this new center is for the educational possibilities it affords. At the core of this program will be a set of courses taught by our faculty and our two post-docs now associated with us. Through these courses we hope to stimulate and encourage a cadre of students who will write term papers, senior essays, perhaps later doctoral dissertations on topics central to our mission. Our goal is to reinvigorate the study of core texts, ideas, and history here at Yale. Our mission is not only theoretical but practical. We are not only hoping to produce future historians and political scientists, but to teach the rudiments of citizenship by providing students with the kind of civic knowledge they will need to take on positions of social and political responsibility and leadership in a constitutional democracy.

I am pleased to welcome you to Yale and I look forward to the tasks ahead.

Steven Smith received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He has taught at Yale since 1984 and is the Alfred Cowles Professor of Political Science and has been Master of Branford College since 1996. He has served as Director of Graduate Studies in Political Science, Director of the Special Program in the Humanities, and Acting Chair of Judaic Studies.

Yale: New center traces gov’t origins

Monday, March 28th, 2011

From the Yale Daily News

By David Burt

Staff Reporter

Monday, March 28, 2011

A new academic center will bring a variety of historians and political scientists to campus to discuss the origins of constitutional government.

The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions was inaugurated at a ceremony Friday that attracted about 80 undergraduates, graduate students and faculty members, as well as staff from the non-profit organization that will fund the new project. Political science professor Steven Smith and history professor Keith Wrightson, co-directors of Yale’s new center, said the project is meant to revamp Yale’s approach to studying the development of American democracy through classes, research and conferences.

photo

Photo by David Burt

The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions was inaugurated Friday.

“Students aren’t getting enough about early government and constitutional government­­­­­­ — that used to be a staple,” Smith said in an interview with the News. “We want to put that back on course.”

Next year, the Center will host a series of speakers and conferences related to its mission.

So far, Wrightson said, two conferences are planned. The first will focus on the statecraft of Abraham Lincoln, he said, and the second will invite professors from both the United States and the United Kingdom to discuss the “whole trajectory” towards democracy from the English Civil War in the 17th century, through the American Revolution and ending with the American Civil War — a major theme of the center itself, he added.

“We want to encourage innovative ways of looking at these issues,” Wrightson said. “It’s a classic story and often told in a way that seems inevitable, but it was hard-fought for at every step of the way.”

The center already brought post-doctoral students Steve Bilakovics and James Vaughn to campus to write books about democracy and the British empire, respectively. The two students are also teaching the undergraduate courses “Exploring the American Dream” and “The British Empire and the Making of the Modern World” this semester.

Political science major Alexander Keller ’11, who is taking Vaughn’s course on the British Empire, said Yale could benefit from offering more classes about the development of American government.

“I do indeed think there should be more courses on our origins,” Keller said. “I would argue that understanding the current institutional arrangement of America … necessitates a familiarity with British history and political thought.”

The Yale center’s focus won support from the Jack Miller Center, a non-profit organization that funds efforts to educate students about American history, said Mike Ratliff, president of the Jack Miller Center.

Any future funding for Smith and Wrightson’s new project from the Jack Miller Center will depend upon its performance, Ratliff added.

“I think it is clear that they have a powerful concept of what can be done and how the resources of Yale University can support this project,” he said. “If they succeed in doing what they said, we will do what we can to find additional resources.”

Success cannot be measured by only simple measures such as attendance at talks, Ratliff said, but should take into account the quality of the programs. He said he hopes the center will become an integral part of Yale’s campus, which could possibly encourage Yale to support the project as well.

Frances Rosenbluth, deputy provost for social sciences and faculty development, said her office does not normally fund such projects, though it sometimes provides a “bridge” between two sources of outside funding should one source end its support before the next goes into effect.

Wrightson said next year’s speakers will include Joyce Appleby, former president of the American Historical Association, and Jack Greene, a historian of colonial America.

New JMC Partner: Yale University

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Launch of the Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions

A New Initiative in Constitutional History

A new interdisciplinary program at Yale dedicated to advancing the study of American and English democratic institutions at their roots was launched March 25.

Called The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions (YCRI), the initiative is a cooperative venture of the Departments of History and Political Science and other affiliated faculty and graduate students. It has been in development for more than a year. The program promotes research and enhances the academic curriculum while advancing the careers of young scholars and extending public discussion of issues related to Anglo-American representative government.

Co-directed by Professors Steven Smith (political science) and Keith Wrightson (history), the YCRI supports innovative research in the development, theory, and practice of representative government in Britain and North America between the 17th and the 19th centuries. The mission statement for the new center by Smith and Wrightson, reads in part: “Our goal is not simply to restore an older historical tradition, but rather to challenge and extend that tradition with new questions.  These questions will focus on the origins, development and diffusion of a political culture that emerged in England during the Civil Wars and ‘Glorious Revolution,’; was transmitted to America during the 17th and 18th centuries, then transformed and extended by the American Revolution, and finally tested in the American Civil War.”

The center will provide opportunities for students to explore “the deep roots of their own political culture, and indeed the most powerful intellectual and institutional influences on the development of representative and democratic governments worldwide,” Smith and Wrightson note.

The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions is supported by the Jack Miller Center (JMC), a Philadelphia-based non-profit educational foundation working to enrich engthen the teaching of “America’s Founding Principles and History.”  More information about the Jack Miller Center is available at www.jackmillercenter.org.

Rear Admiral Perry Michael Ratliff (ret.), president of JMC, congratulated the co-directors of the new initiative: “The Center for the Study of Representative Institutions will provide a home at Yale for the study and teaching of the ideas and debates that have shaped America’s free institutions.  Professors Wrightson and Smith have provided invaluable support for JMC programs in the past, and we are honored to be part of their new program.”

Two postdoctoral fellows have been appointed, both of whom will teach undergraduate courses related to the center’s themes.  A symposium on Lincoln is scheduled to take place in the fall of 2011, to be followed in 2012 by a conference reappraising the developments of the whole period from the 17th to the 19th centuries.  A public lecture series, the specifics to be announced, will feature distinguished scholars from history, political science and related disciplines with the aim to encourage broad participation.  The center will also provide small grants to undergraduate and graduate students to encourage research on topics relevant to the center’s core themes.

#     #     #

For more information contact:

Danilo Petranovich

Assistant Director

Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions

203 645-1009

danilo.petranovich@yale.edu

Miller Center Network Publications

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

The Jack Miller Center wants to congratulate the members of our JMC network who have published a book length manuscript in the last calendar year. Few accomplishments are as meaningful and lasting for authors, and those who read them.

The list also is a demonstration of the broad intellectual interests of our network. Although many directly address America’s Founding and History, the list includes subjects and authors that compose the intellectual, historical, and political resources the American Founders drew upon as well as current events that are of interest to all of us.

Nathan Busch, Combating Weapons of Mass Destruction: The Future of Non-Proliferation Policy, co-edited with Daniel H. Joyner (University of George Press, 2009)

Ross Corbett, The Lockean Commonwealth (SUNY, 2009)

Donald Critchlow, ed., Debating Conservatism (Rowman and Littlefield, 2009),  Politics and Hollywood (Routledge, 2009)

John Dinan, paperback edition of The American State Constitutional Tradition

Jonathan Dunn, From Schoolhouse to Courthouse: The Judiciary’s Role in American Education, co-edited with Martin West (Brookings Institution Press, 2009)

Robert Faulkner and Susan Shell, co-editors of American at Risk: Threats to Liberal Self-Government in an Age of Uncertainty (University of Michigan Press, 2009)

Michael Gillespie, paperback edition of The Theological Origins of Modernity

Allen Guelzo, Lincoln (Oxford University Press, 2009), Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas (Southern Illinois University Press, 2009)

William Hay, Lives of Victorian Political Figures, Part IV (William Bagehot) (Pickering and Chatto Publishers, 2009)

Louie Herbert, More than Kings and Less than Men: Tocqueville on the Promise and Perils of Democratic Individualism (Lexington Books, 2009)

Steve Kautz, The Supreme Court and the Idea of Constitutionalism, co-edited with Arthur Melzer, Jerry Weinberger, Richard Zinman (Penn Press, 2009)

Christopher Kelly, Rousseau on Women, Love, and Family, co-edited with Eve Grace (University Press of New England, 2009)

Harvey Klehr, co-author of Spies: The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America (Yale University Press, 2009), The Communist Experience in America (Transaction Publishers, 2009)

Benjamin Kleinerman, The Discretionary President: The Promise and Peril of Executive Power (2009)

Robert Koons, The Waning of Materialism: new Essays on the Mind/Body Problem, co-edited with George Bealer (Oxford University Press, 2009)

Ralph Lerner, Playing the Fool: Subversive Laughter in Troubled Times (University of Chicago Press, 2009)

Paul Rahe, Montesquieu and the Logic of Liberty: War, Religion, Commerce, Climate, Terrain, Technology, Uneasiness of Mind, the Spirit of Political Vigilance, and the Foundations of the Modern Republic (Yale University Press, 2009), Soft Despotism, Democracy’s Drift: Montesquieu, Rousseau, Tocqueville, and the Modern Prospect (Yale University Press, 2009)

Eric Sands, American Public Philosophy and the Mystery of Lincolnism (University of Missouri Press, 2009)

Brian Schoen, Fragile Fabric of Union: Cotton, Federal Politics, and the Global Origins of the Civil War (Johns Hopkins Press, 2009)

Colleen Sheehan, James Madison and the Spirit of Republican Self-Government (Cambridge University Press, 2009)

Susan Shell, Kant and the Limits of Autonomy (Harvard University Press, 2009)

Steven Smith, The Cambridge Companion to Leo Strauss (2009)

Barry Strauss, The Spartacus War (Simon & Schuster, 2009)

Jeffrey K. Tulis, The Constitutional Presidency, co-edited with Joseph M. Bessette (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009)

Gordon Wood, Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815 (Oxford, 2009)

Michael Zuckert, The Anti-Federalist Writings of the Melancton Smith Circle, co-edited with Derek Webb (Liberty Fund, 2009).

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