The new issue (vol. 22, no. 2) includes two symposia: the first is on The Summer Institute of Civic Studies at Tufts University, and the second is on The Contemporary Relevance of Aristotelian Political Theory. All these articles will be open access for the next two months!
The Civic Studies symposium:
- “The Summer Institute of Civic Studies: An Introduction” by Karol Soltan and Peter Levine
- “Civic Studies: Fundamental Questions, Interdisciplinary Methods,” by Alison K. Cohen, J. Ruth Dawley-Carr, Liza Pappas, and Alison Staudinger
- “What Should You and I Do?: Lessons for Civic Studies from Deliberative Politics in the New Deal” by Timothy J. Shaffer
- “Living Well Together: Citizenship, Education, and Moral Formation” by Elizabeth Gish and Paul Markham
- “Civic Studies: Bringing Theory to Practice” by Katherine Kravetz
- “The Civic Institute Relocated: Designing a Syllabus for Undergraduate Students at a Public University” by Susan Orr
- “Deliberation and Civic Studies” by Matt Chick
The Aristotelian Political Theory symposium:
- “Political Animals Revisited” by Josiah Ober
- “Boundaries, Birthright, and Belonging: Aristotle on the Distribution of Citizenship ” by Richard Boyd
- “Uselessness: A Panegyric” by David Curry
- “Aristotelian Necessities” by Randall Curren
Our issue closes with a retrospective by the founding editor, Stephen L. Elkin: