The
Witherspoon Institute is an independent research center that works
to enhance public understanding of the moral foundations of free and
democratic societies. Located at Whelan Hall (pictured) in Princeton, New Jersey, the
Institute promotes the application of fundamental principles of
republican government and ordered liberty to contemporary problems
through a variety of research and educational ventures.
From the Institute
Challenges to Religious Liberty in the Twenty-First Century Edited by Gerard V. Bradley
From Cambridge University Press comes a collection of essays , Challenges to Religious Liberty in the Twenty-First Century.
These papers were presented at a conference of the Simon Center on
Religion and the Constitution titled "Law and Religion: Historical
and Philosophical Perspectives", and are edited by Gerard V. Bradley
(Notre Dame Law School).
Almost everyone today affirms the importance and merit of religious
liberty. But religious liberty is being challenged by new questions
(for example, use of the niqab or church adoption services for
same-sex couples) and new forces (such as globalization and
Islamism). Combined, these make the meaning of religious liberty in
the twenty-first century uncertain. This collection of essays by ten
of the world's leading scholars on religious liberty takes aim at
these issues. The book is arranged around five specific challenges
to religious liberty today: the state's responsibility to prevent
coercion and intimidation of believers by others within the same
faith community; the U.S.'s basic moral responsibilities to promote
religious liberty abroad; how to understand and apply the
traditional right of conscientious objection in today's
circumstances; the distinctive problems presented by globalization;
and the viability today of an originalist interpretation of the
First Amendment religion clauses.
More...
Robert George Appointed to U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom April 2, 2012
Robert
P. George, the Witherspoon Institute's Herbert W. Vaughan Senior
Fellow, has been appointed to the United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).
The appointment was made by Speaker of the United States
House of Representatives John Boehner. The USCIRF was created by
Congress as part of the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998.
The nine members of the independent, bipartisan Federal agency are
appointed by the President of the United States and the leaders of
both parties in the House and Senate.
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Religious Freedom: Why Now? Defending an Embattled Human
Right
Religious freedom is under sustained pressure today around the
world. In some places, it is fair to say that religious freedom is
under siege. This book is a response to that sobering fact.
For the last three years, the Witherspoon Institute's Task Force on
International Religious Freedom has examined the various dimensions
of the challenge faced by religious freedom, and has deliberated on
the most effective policy responses that can be undertaken by the
United States government, and by other governments around the world.
The return of an interdisciplinary meeting of experts from the
fields of psychology, sociology, law, philosophy, theology,
political science, and international relations, this statement
offers a robust consideration of religious freedom's present
condition and the prospects for its future.
More...
The Stem Cell Debates: Lessons from Science and Politics
In its inaugural report, the
Witherspoon Council on Ethics and the Integrity of Science
considers the proper relationship between science, ethics, and
politics by examining the most prominent science-related controversy
of the past decade: the stem cell debates. These debates touched on
fundamental questions concerning the governance of science and the
moral status of embryonic human life. More than just a scholarly
assessment of those debates, this report seeks to improve the public
understanding of how science and democratic politics relate,
including the responsibilities of scientists and policymakers. We
consider the inevitable interplay between science and ethics and the
conflicts of interest that arise when scientists are both advisors
to policymakers and petitioners for their allocations. Among the
reports most crucial lessons is that, in our system of
participatory republican government, we are responsible for
considering not only the potential benefits of scientific research
but also the ethical implications of that research.
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Herbert W. Vaughan, Philanthropist, 1920-2011
The Witherspoon Institute mourns the passing away of Herbert W.
Vaughan, lawyer, preservationist and philanthropist. Vaughan was a
passionate scholar of government and history, particularly the
United States Constitution, which he regarded as the greatest
practical achievement of political science. He was a member of the
board of directors of the Witherspoon Institute, a research center that supports the
work of scholars interested in western moral political thought and
the principles and institutions of American government. A fellow of
the Massachusetts Historical Society and a member of the James
Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton
University, Vaughan endowed lecture series at Princeton and at his
alma mater, Harvard Law School, to advance the understanding of the
core doctrines of American constitutionalism.
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Embryo:
A Defense of Human Life, Second Edition
by Robert P. George and Christopher Tollefsen The Witherspoon Institute is pleased to announce the
publication of the revised, second edition of Embryo: A Defense
of Human Life by Robert P. George (Princeton University) and
Christopher Tollefsen (University of South Carolina), available in
paperback and eBook at
Amazon.com.
National debates over embryonic-stem-cell research have divided
citizens and lawmakers alike, as we seek a reasoned approach to
these issues that honors our highest scientific and moral ideals. In
this timely consideration of the nature and rights of human embryos,
George and Tollefsen make a compelling case that we as a society
should neither condone nor publicly fund research that kills or
harms human beings at any stage of development including the
embryonic stage. More...
Yasser Khalil
Featured in British Council Video Yasser Khalil, a young Egyptian, speaks about the
importance of a rigorous discussion of religious freedom in Muslim
and non-Muslim majority countries. Mr. Khalil was a participant in the
Institute's
Islam and Religious Freedom seminar, and here reflects on how the seminar
and
Dr. Jennifer Bryson shaped his understanding of religious
freedom in light of contemporary events in the Middle East.
The New Family Structure Study of the Population Research
Center at the University of Texas at Austin
August 8, 2011 The Witherspoon Institute is pleased to support the New Family
Structure Study (NFSS) at the
Population
Research Center of the University of Texas at Austin. The study
is directed by professors
Mark Regnerus (Principal Investigator) and
Cynthia Osborne (Co-Investigator), who are in turn guided by a
research team made up of a diverse group of family scholars. The
members of the NFSS research team include scholars who hold
divergent views on the normative questions in contemporary debates
over marriage and the family.
Virtuosity
in Business:
Invisible Law Guiding the Invisible Hand by Kevin T. Jackson
The
University of Pennsylvania Press has recently published Virtuosity in Business:
Invisible Law Guiding the Invisible Hand by
Kevin T.
Jackson, Daniel Janssen Chair in Corporate Social Responsibility
at Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management, Universite
Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, and Senior Fellow of the Witherspoon
Institute.
The
recent global financial crisis raises pressing issues that are not
exclusively economic. The health of the economy, Kevin T. Jackson
contends, reflects the moral health of the wider culture: ethics
must be considered along with economics to understand world markets,
especially now that globalization and other forces have increasingly
complicated the regulation of transnational corporate conduct.
Virtuosity in Business calls on businesspeople and ethicists to
expand their thinking by stressing the profound relevance of
philosophy to business and economics.
More...
More
God, Less Crime by Byron R. Johnson The Templeton Press has recently published More God, Less Crime:
Why Faith Matter and How It Could Matter More by Byron R.
Johnson.
Johnson is Distinguished Professor of the Social Sciences, Director
of the Institute for Studies of Religion, and director of the
Program on Prosocial Behavior, all at Baylor University. He is also
a Senior
Fellow at the Witherspoon Institute.
In More God, Less Crime renowned criminologist Byron R.
Johnson proves that religion can be a powerful antidote to crime.
The book describes how faith communities, congregations, and
faith-based organizations are essential in forming partnerships
necessary to provide the human and spiritual capital to effectively
address crime, offender rehabilitation, and the substantial
aftercare problems facing former prisoners.
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Natural Law, Natural Rights, and American Constitutionalism
As we honor Martin Luther King, Jr.,
the Witherspoon Institute
is proud to announce a public preview of a new online academic
resource dedicated to natural law and the American tradition. Today is an apt occasion to learn more deeply about that
great tradition, to which, King said, we are the heirs through the
"magnificent words" of the "architects of our republic."
The aim of the Witherspoon
Institutes project is to create a nonpartisan, educational website
on Natural Law, Natural Rights, and American Constitutionalism,
which will serve as an online resource center for students,
teachers, and educated citizens to learn about the intellectual
traditions of natural law and natural rights, particularly within
American political and constitutional history.
More...