Course Descriptions
Undergraduate
CLT 3000 – The Art of Statesmanship and the Civic Life
This course examines the art of statesmanship, the meaning of political greatness, and the means of educating aspiring young statesmen and stateswomen. The ambition, moral character, cunning, prudence, and grit required for effective statesmanship are analyzed using books written by past statesmen for future statesmen. The course also explores whether the life of leadership is a desirable way of life. Differences between classical and modern statesmanship are considered, in addition to the unique demands that different regimes and natural circumstances place on founders and leaders.
CLT 3010 – The Art of Rhetoric and the Civic Life
This course examines the art of rhetoric and the role that rhetoric plays in different political societies. The purposes and limitations of rhetoric and public deliberation in modern democracies will be analyzed through close readings of great speeches from classical to modern times. The tradition of great speeches by American men and women is a special focus of this course. Other forms of writing, including philosophical texts, dialogues, essays, and literary works will be considered. Students will also write and present their own oration and may receive feedback from professional speechwriters.
CLT 3500 – Civic Discourse
This course explores the value of civic discourse to an open, free, and tolerant society and provides students with an opportunity to learn and practice the core skills necessary to civic discourse. Students will study the underlying philosophic justifications for maintaining an open society and the connection between civic discourse and an open society. Students will also study how to productively discuss difficult or sensitive subjects with others who hold different or contrary views, and the value of doing so. The class will confront a series of contemporary “hot-button” issues (i.e. gun control, immigration, abortion, policing) to allow students the opportunity to engage in civic discourse.
CLT 3510 – Competing Theories of Justice
This course explores competing theories of justice as models we can use to explore and think more carefully about contemporary controversies in public, political, and social spheres. Students will assess the practical applications of those theories in different situations. Students will also research and prepare an executive summary on different actions, laws or public policies. They will present these summaries in a mini-conference that will take place as part of the course.
CLT 3990 – Special Topics in Civic Thought
The Institute's Special Topics courses focus on a careful reading of a single text, a comprehensive study of a single author’s thought, or a more broad investigations of ideas, history, and texts across multiple authors. Topics vary every year and are selected by the instructor. These courses may be repeated for a total of 6 credit hours under different topics.
Special Topics in Civic Thought for academic year 2024-25 include:
American Conservatism (Fall 2024)
This course examines the history, principles, and influential thinkers of American conservatism. Students will explore the philosophical foundations of conservatism, from Edmund Burke to modern-day theorists, and trace its development in the United States. Key figures include James Madison, Friedrich Hayek, Ayn Rand, Russell Kirk, and William F. Buckley. The course will also explore diverse strands within conservatism, including traditionalism, libertarianism, and neoconservatism. Students will gain a rich understanding of conservatism's impact on America.
Democracy in America (Fall 2024)
In Democracy in America, we will come to understand the nature of the American regime and its most foundational principle through exploring the American Constitution and the philosophical and political ideas that animated its creation and development. We will examine critical historical periods—specifically, the Founding era, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Progressives—through the writings of statesmen, authors, and other writers who have provided thoughtful commentary on the American experiment. Throughout the semester, we will also reflect on how the American regime relates to the larger tradition of Western political thought.
Lincoln's Statesmanship (Fall 2024)
In this course, we will study the political thought and statesmanship of one of America’s most renowned political leaders, Abraham Lincoln. Doing so will not only help us to better know our 16th president, but it will also give us the opportunity to pursue some of the most complex questions about political life—questions that still animate our contemporary debates. Through studying Lincoln’s writings and actions, we will consider: the complicated relationship between moral principle and political action, the source and scope of the president’s war powers, the relationship between the nation and the states, and the meaning of our nation’s most foundational documents: the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution. We will explore these topics through an intensive study of the writings and speeches of Lincoln and his interlocutors.
American Liberalism (Spring 2024)
This Special Topics course examines the history, principles, and influential thinkers of American liberalism. Students will explore the philosophical foundations of liberalism, from Adam Smith to modern-day theorists, and trace its development in Great Britain, France, and the United States. Key figures include Benjamin Constant, John Stuart Mill, Harriett Taylor, Frederick Douglass, John Dewey, Friedrich Hayek, John Maynard Keynes, Martin Luther King, Jr., Judith Shklar, John Rawls, and Martha Nussbaum. The course will also explore diverse strands within liberalism, with a focus on debates about the efficacy and justice of the market economy and about the coherence and nature of social justice.
Model U.S. Senate (Spring 2024)
Students in this course will study historical debates in the U.S. Senate before arguing the positions of significant historical figures in simulations. This course is a convergence between scholarship and practical statesmanship, teaching students about the relationship between ideas and action. Students are assigned the role of a historical senator, whose arguments and character they research and discuss. This course involves regular classroom instruction sessions leading up to 3-4 simulations throughout the semester.
College of Law
LAWT 9000 – Freedom of Expression During Times of War and Panic
Spanning the breadth of U.S. history, from the 1798 Sedition Act to today’s “cancel culture,” this course will examine many of the great legal cases that, during times of stress and division, have most tested the nation’s commitment to what Justice Louis Brandeis called the “The Indispensable Right”—without which every other liberty listed in our Constitution will ultimately fall.
LAWT 9600 – Ohio Constitutional Law
This course provides students with a more accurate understanding of the Ohio Constitution by studying it in within the broader context of American constitutionalism. The course has four components: introducing the Ohio Constitution’s history and evolution, learning the Ohio Constitution’s key substantive provisions, comparing Ohio constitutional provisions and interpretive approaches with components and interpretations of the U.S. Constitution, and asking whether there is a correct theory of interpretation for the Ohio Constitution and what that theory may be. Students read primary source documents and secondary scholarship. The course also features guest lecturers who will engage with the class on their areas of expertise.
LAWP 6000 – The Death Penalty
This course focuses on how and why, through decades of controversy, capital punishment remains in the United States. It is both a substantive law course and an interdisciplinary seminar involving philosophy, politics, and sociology. It is also an invitation to look inward at your own values. We will lift capital punishment’s hood to see, up close, how the different parts of “the machinery of death,” as Justice Blackmun called it, operate. We will ask whether these parts are functioning correctly and justly—always against a backdrop of dissenting jurists challenging whether it should be allowed to function at all.
LAWP 9000 – Wrongful Convictions
This course examines the most common causes of wrongful convictions, including: Eyewitness misidentifications, false confessions, law enforcement misconduct, lying police informants, and junk science.