The Political Theory Review
A podcast by Jeffrey Church
153 Episodes
-
Episode 179: Natasha Piano - Democratic Elitism
Published: 04/06/2025 -
Episode 178: Agustina Paglayan - Raised to Obey
Published: 20/05/2025 -
Episode 177: Ryan Balot - Tragedy, Philosophy, and Political Education in Plato's Laws
Published: 16/05/2025 -
Episode 176: Michael Fuerstein - Experiments in Living Together
Published: 25/04/2025 -
Episode 175: Laurie M. Johnson - The Gap in God''s Country
Published: 10/04/2025 -
Episode 174: Leah Downey - Our Money
Published: 19/03/2025 -
Episode 173: Kevin Pham - The Architects of Dignity
Published: 06/03/2025 -
Episode 172: Ali Aslam, David McIvor, and Joel Schlosser - Earthborn Democracy
Published: 24/02/2025 -
Episode 171: Anna Marisa Schoen - Nations before the Nation-State
Published: 18/02/2025 -
Episode 170: Vanessa Wills - Marx's Ethical Vision
Published: 30/01/2025 -
Episode 169: Alasia Nuti - Politicizing Political Liberalism
Published: 08/01/2025 -
Episode 168: Espen Hammer - After the Death of God
Published: 10/12/2024 -
Episode 167: Mary Nichols - Aristotle's Discovery of the Human
Published: 22/11/2024 -
Episode 166: Nancy Rosenblum - Ungoverning
Published: 19/11/2024 -
Episode 165: Fabienne Peter - The Grounds of Political Legitimacy
Published: 07/11/2024 -
Episode 164: Stephen Darwall - The Heart and Its Attitudes
Published: 04/11/2024 -
Episode 163: Alexandre Lefebvre - Liberalism as a Way of Life
Published: 29/10/2024 -
Episode 162: Jordan Cash - The Isolated Presidency
Published: 18/10/2024 -
Episode 161: Nazmul Sultan - Waiting for the People
Published: 08/10/2024 -
Episode 160: David Lay Williams - The Greatest of All Plagues
Published: 26/09/2024
Conversations with scholars on recent books in Political Theory and Social and Political Philosophy.This podcast is not affiliated with the University of Houston, and no opinions expressed on this podcast are that of the University of Houston. Image: Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778), After a model by Jean Antoine Houdon (French, Versailles 1741–1828 Paris), in the public domain courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art