Topic

Peter Berkowitz

65 articles 1998–2018

Does Harvard Hate Humanities?

Peter Berkowitz · July 8, 2013

Study of the humanities has never been more important to the welfare of the nation. Information whizzes by at breakneck speed. The contest between conservative and progressive visions of government’s scope and aim in a free society implicates rival understandings of human nature. The ways of life…

Are Universities Above the Law?

Peter Berkowitz · May 20, 2013

Corporate governance is a much-discussed topic, and the operation of corporations has proven a fertile field for investigative journalism. But even though many colleges and universities are multibillion-dollar-a-year operations, the subject of university governance has been largely neglected. This…

Upon Further Review .  .  .

Peter Berkowitz · April 18, 2011

To the astonishment of friends and foes of Israel alike, on April 1 in the Washington Post, Justice Richard Goldstone reversed himself. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu promptly demanded that the United Nations retract the Goldstone Report, which, following its publication in September…

Upon Further Review .  .  .

Peter Berkowitz · April 18, 2011

To the astonishment of friends and foes of Israel alike, on April 1 in the Washington Post, Justice Richard Goldstone reversed himself. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu promptly demanded that the United Nations retract the Goldstone Report, which, following its publication in September…

E. J. Dionne Misunderstands the Tea Party

Peter Berkowitz · October 25, 2010

On Oct. 22, Washington Post columnist E. J. Dionne, among our most knowledgeable progressive political commentators, published a courteous rebuttal, “Debating the Tea Party: A Reply to Peter Berkowitz,” to my recent Wall Street Journal op-ed, “Why Liberals don’t get the Tea Party Movement.”  The…

He's No Ronald Reagan

Peter Berkowitz · August 10, 2009

On July 29, 1981, barely six months into his presidency and in the face of an economic crisis of historic proportions, Ronald Reagan succeeded in persuading both houses of Congress to pass dramatic tax cuts that set the stage for nearly three decades of vigorous economic growth. In doing so, he…

He's No Ronald Reagan

Peter Berkowitz · August 10, 2009

On July 29, 1981, barely six months into his presidency and in the face of an economic crisis of historic proportions, Ronald Reagan succeeded in persuading both houses of Congress to pass dramatic tax cuts that set the stage for nearly three decades of vigorous economic growth. In doing so, he…

Obama's Empathy Test

Peter Berkowitz · July 13, 2009

In discharging their constitutional duty to provide advice and, if they deem appropriate, give consent to President Barack Obama's nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court, Senators should examine the critical importance the president attaches to empathy as a judicial virtue and to…

Pragmatism Obama Style

Peter Berkowitz · May 4, 2009

As candidate and as president, Barack Obama has presented himself as a postpartisan pragmatist. He has generally refrained from speaking in explicitly ideological terms, and earned a reputation as a silver-tongued orator. Yet on important issues he has seemed anything but pragmatic, adopting…

Supposing Obama Were a Bipartisan

Peter Berkowitz · November 17, 2008

In August 2004, a then-obscure Illinois state senator delivered a dazzling keynote address at the Democratic National Convention. Of special interest, because it departed from the election season's bitter partisanship, was his eloquent insistence on the unity undergirding the nation's great…

Are Universities Above the Law?

Peter Berkowitz · October 27, 2008

Three lawsuits--against Dartmouth College and Duke and Princeton universities--may be the best things to happen to higher education in decades. The Dartmouth suit, though recently withdrawn, focused attention on the role of alumni in college affairs. The Duke case raises the question of the extent…

Excommunicationfor Thee . . .

Peter Berkowitz · February 26, 2007

Alan Wolfe is a distinguished public intellectual. He is professor of political science and director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life at Boston College. He is a longtime contributing editor to the New Republic. He is a frequent contributor to the Sunday New York Times Book…

U.S. Military: 8Elite Law Schools: 0

Peter Berkowitz · March 20, 2006

CHIEF JUSTICE JOHN ROBERTS'S UNANIMOUS opinion for the Supreme Court in Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Individual Rights, upholding the constitutionality of the Solomon Amendment against challenge by a coalition of law schools and law faculties, decisively resolved the essential legal issues…

Summers's End

Peter Berkowitz · March 6, 2006

The significance of Lawrence Summers's resignation under fire as president of Harvard University has been widely misunderstood. Oozing sympathy for a beleaguered and aggrieved Harvard faculty, the Boston Globe editorial page argued that because he was "arrogant" and "brusque," in short a "bully,"…

Ariel Sharon's Legacy

Peter Berkowitz · January 16, 2006

THE POST-SHARON ERA began abruptly on January 5, when the 77-year-old prime minister of Israel suffered a massive stroke while visiting his beloved ranch in the northern Negev. By the time Sharon reached the hospital, the bleeding in his brain had already made a return to government for the true…

Speaking Their Language

Peter Berkowitz · October 4, 2005

IT'S NOT EVERY DAY that the government is presented with an opportunity to educate the nation, fortify national security, and enhance public diplomacy, and to do so with a simple program that can be administered with a tiny staff and implemented at bargain prices. Yet the establishment of a program…

Eye on 2007

Peter Berkowitz · July 8, 2005

ON JUNE 29, in its comfortable Watergate suite, the Kuwait Information Office hosted a lunch in honor of its National Assembly's historic May 16 decision to grant women the right to vote and run for office. Granted, the very idea of a government ministry devoted to the regulation and dissemination…

They Always Bash Bush First

Peter Berkowitz · February 7, 2005

LOCAL CRITICS HAVE FOUND IN President Bush's second inaugural address an excellent opportunity to remonstrate, revile, and ridicule the president. Only they've had to rewrite the speech to do it.

A Second Chance to Unite

Peter Berkowitz · November 12, 2004

ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, November 3, the day after the election, in front of an exhausted crowd of ardent supporters at the Ronald Reagan building, President Bush embraced victory, thanked those who had stood with him, and reaffirmed his commitment to reform the tax code, repair social security,…

Two Out of Three Ain't Bad

Peter Berkowitz · July 19, 2004

GIVEN his constitutional role as commander in chief, with principal responsibility for the nation's security, the president might be expected to overreach occasionally in times of war, to place the energetic defense of the country ahead of the meticulous safeguarding of civil liberties. Equally,…

Breeding Insecurity

Peter Berkowitz · June 14, 2004

ISRAELI JEWS prefer not to talk about the so-called demographic problem--the challenge of maintaining a Jewish majority in their country while honoring the rights of its large and growing Arab minority. Which is understandable. The very term conjures up illiberal images of a government classifying…

Dubious Diversity

Peter Berkowitz · July 7, 2003

BACK IN THE LATE 1980S, several of my Yale Law School classmates and I launched into yet another earnest and well-meaning discussion about racial diversity. On that particular evening we turned to the faculty and proceeded empirically. As we counted the individuals of minority race, I casually…

What Hath Strauss Wrought?

Peter Berkowitz · June 2, 2003

THE NEW YORK TIMES, the New Yorker, and the Boston Globe, among others, have sounded the alarm: The Bush administration, particularly its foreign policy team, is in the grip of a coterie of neoconservative intellectuals who are themselves in the grip of the antidemocratic and illiberal teachings of…

Hypocrisy at the U.N.

Peter Berkowitz · March 24, 2003

LAST DECEMBER, in his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, former President Jimmy Carter linked the United States' responsibility to lead the world in implementing U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441, passed last November, more than a decade after Iraq's unlawful invasion and annexation of…

The Academic Liberal

Peter Berkowitz · December 16, 2002

JOHN RAWLS, who died on November 24 at age eighty-one, was the towering figure of academic liberalism. A gentle, dignified, self-effacing man, he taught philosophy at Harvard for more than thirty years and exerted a commanding influence on his profession, single-handedly shifting its dominant…

Liberals Versus Religion

Peter Berkowitz · July 15, 2002

THE UNITED STATES Supreme Court's 5-4 decision in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris upholding the constitutionality of the Ohio school voucher program was not really as close as it seems, at least not if the quality of the constitutional arguments of the majority is weighed against the quality of the…

After Autonomy

Peter Berkowitz · June 17, 2002

Liberal Pluralism The Implications of Value Pluralism for Political Theory and Practice by William A. Galston Cambridge University Press, 152 pp., $19 AMONG ACADEMIC LIBERALS and professional political theorists, William Galston is exemplary. In several fine books, he has undertaken extensive…

Liberal Education

Peter Berkowitz · May 20, 2002

Charters, Vouchers, and Public Education edited by Paul E. Peterson and David E. Campbell Brookings, 320 pp., $42.95 Revolution at the Margins The Impact of Competition on Urban School Systems by Frederick M. Hess Brookings, 268 pp., $18.95 Rhetoric versus Reality What We Know and What We Need to…

Kafka in Massachusetts

Peter Berkowitz · April 1, 2002

FREE SPEECH, fair process, and judicial independence are under assault in Massachusetts. What makes the attack peculiarly insidious is that it is being led by the commonwealth's highest court. Unavoidably, courts must occasionally rule in cases involving alleged judicial misconduct. In such cases,…

Jane Addams's Values

Peter Berkowitz · March 25, 2002

Jane Addams and the Dream of American Democracy by Jean Bethke Elshtain Basic, 336 pp., $28 The Jane Addams Reader edited by Jean Bethke Elshtain Basic, 432 pp., $20 JEAN BETHKE ELSHTAIN, the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Professor of Social and Political Ethics at the University of Chicago, intends…

Tribe v. Truth

Peter Berkowitz · February 4, 2002

ONE OF the reasons Bush v. Gore won't go away is that its scholarly critics--who are numerous, influential, and vehement--won't let it. Many of the biggest guns in the business--Yale's Bruce Ackerman, Harvard's Alan Dershowitz, New York University's Ronald Dworkin--weighed in early and denounced…

Giving Sophistry a Bad Name

Peter Berkowitz · December 31, 2001

IN RESPONSE TO SEPTEMBER 11, people from many walks of life performed their jobs with spirit and guts and aplomb. Exhibiting a high degree of seriousness and professionalism, the police and the firefighters, the doctors and nurses, the ground zero construction crews and the media, the mayor and the…

Questioning America

Peter Berkowitz · June 25, 2001

ALAN WOLFE, A DISTINGUISHED SOCIOLOGIST and public intellectual, has been asking ordinary Americans about virtue. For his recent book Moral Freedom: The Search for Virtue in a World of Choice, Wolfe and his research team interviewed individuals in communities around the country and from all walks…