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James Hankins
All Writings and Appearances


Learning Civics from History
Law & Liberty, September 11, 2024 When confronted with confusing or appalling new events—and the last few years have surely had plenty of...


Rehumanizing the Humanities
First Things , September 10, 2024 I have to admit to a tendency for my eyes to glaze over when people talk about a crisis in the...


Saving Western Civilization
American Politics and Government Summit, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, June 10, 2024 This compelling conversation with Dan McCarthy...


Can Harvard Win Back America’s Respect?
Law & Liberty, June 3, 2024 Harvard has had a very bad year. It began last summer with the Supreme Court’s verdict in Students for Fair...


The World We Have Lost
Law and Liberty , May 31, 2024 (Review of The Holdovers ) It’s a well-known fact that historians generally don’t like historical...


The Difference Between Belief and Observance
First Things , April 9, 2024 When I was at All Souls College at Oxford some years ago I had a conversation during a Saturday evening...


Hope for Harvard?
Law & Liberty, March 18, 2024 Tacitus at the beginning of his Annals , after brilliantly summarizing all of Roman history in the space...


Do You Want Your Children To Go to Harvard?
The Harvard Crimson , January 29, 2024 If you are a Harvard undergraduate, the question in my title might not be top of mind. In the...


An Honest Diversity Statement
Law & Liberty, January 18, 2024 For a number of years now pleasant young women (or persons identifying as women, or with female-sounding...


Was Renaissance Virtue Politics a Failure?
The Good Society , vol. 31, no. 1 (2022) The teaching of virtue in the Renaissance was certainly more generic and more bookish. The texts...


Claudine Gay and Why Academic Honesty Matters
The Wall Street Journal, December 27, 2023 Claudine Gay, the president of my university, is under attack for academic dishonesty. She is...


Classical Education Is Not a Right-Wing Project
First Things, November 15, 2023 Recently a book of mine underwent a perplexing treatment in the New York Review of Books. Normally one is...


Optimism for the Middle Class?
Law and Liberty , November 13, 2023 If, like me, you are a conservative living in the world of academe, you tend to take a dark view of...


Harvard Debates Itself
Law & Liberty, November 2, 2023 Harvard, which FIRE recently ranked near the bottom for academic freedom among leading US universities,...


The Roman Custom
The New Criterion , September 2023 A c lassic debate among historians of Rome attempts to answer the question of how this city-state on...


The Past as Enemy Country: Why Teachers of Great Books Should Be Teaching History, Too
Public Discourse, August 3, 2023 We need to study history as a subject in its own right, acquiring a deep appreciation for the story of...


The Case for Legacy Admissions
The Wall Street Journal, July 19, 2023 In my 38 years teaching at Harvard, I have only twice met members of Harvard’s governing boards,...


A Centrist Strategy for Higher Education Reform
Law & Liberty, May 30, 2023 When most Americans hear the expression “liberal conservative,” they think of it as an oxymoron at best, at...


The Greatness of Alexander
First Things , May 12, 2023 King Alexander III of Macedon is beyond doubt among the greatest figures in world history. But was he a great...


Educating the Virtuous Citizen: A View from the Renaissance
Principia: A Journal of Classical Education 2.1 (Spring 2023) Francesco Patrizi of Siena (1413–1494) was the most important political...
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