Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
With the arrival of the new administration, judicial nominations
will once again become a central concern for all those interested
in the preservation of our constitutional order. Based upon
his newly released book - Living Constitution, Dying Faith:
Progressivism and the New Science of Jurisprudence - political
scientist and legal historian Bradley C.S. Watson will discuss how
the contemporary embrace of the "living" Constitution has arisen
from the radical transformation of American political
thought. This transformation, brought about in the late 19th
Century by the philosophies of social Darwinism and pragmatism,
explains how and why contemporary jurisprudence is so alien to the
constitutionalism of the American Founders, and why today's courts
rule the way they do. Today's view - rooted in progressivism
- is that we have a Constitution that must be interpreted in light
of "historically situated," continually evolving notions of the
individual, the state, and society. This modern historical approach
has been embraced by the judicial appointees of both Democratic and
Republican presidents.
Bradley C. S. Watson holds the Philip M. McKenna Chair in
American and Western Political Thought at Saint Vincent College in
Latrobe, Pennsylvania, where he is also Chairperson of the
Department of Political Science. He has held visiting faculty
appointments at Princeton University and Claremont McKenna
College. Additionally, he is Research Associate at the Center
for the Study of American Civic Literacy, a project of the
Intercollegiate Studies Institute, and serves on the Boards of
Directors of the National Association of Scholars and the
Association for the Study of Free Institutions. Dr. Watson
has authored or edited many books, including Civil Rights and
the Paradox of Liberal Democracy and Courts and the Culture
Wars. Prior to becoming a political scientist, he
practiced as a civil litigation attorney in Vancouver,
Canada. He was educated in Canada, Belgium, and the United
States, and holds advanced degrees in law, philosophy, and
political science.
More About the Speakers
Bradley C.S. Watson, Ph.D.
Philip M. McKenna Chair in American and
Western Political Thought,
Saint Vincent College
Hosted By
Matthew Spalding, Ph.D.
Vice President, American Studies and Director, B. Kenneth Simon Center for Principles and Politics
Read More