Education
He was a 1973 graduate of DeSales University and holds a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Virginia.
He was a 1973 graduate of DeSales University and holds a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Virginia.
He teaches courses in political philosophy and American politics. He also served on the editorial board of the new bilingual critical edition of Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America. Lawler also serves on the editorial boards of several journals.
He has written or edited fifteen books
HisModern and American Dignity was the reason he was chosen the 2010 Georgia Author of the Year. Over the last year alone, he gave nearly thirty lectures at various institutions and conferences.
He was the 2015 Ross Lence Master Teacher at Residence at the Honors College at the University of Houston. Lawler writes broadly from a Catholic intellectual tradition that emphasizes the importance of limits on unfettered personal autonomy in shaping well-lived lives, as well as the centrality of the love of truth in making sense of the human experience and knowing "who we are and what we are supposed to do." Lawler argues that moral anthropology suggests the possibility of God"s existence and love.
His influences include both Catholics like Augustine, Pierre Manent, Thomas, Pascal, Flannery O"Connor, Tocqueville and Walker Percy, as well as non-Catholic thinkers (especially Leo Strauss).
In 2004, Lawler was appointed to President Bush"s Council on Bioethics. He served until the council was terminated by President Obama in 2009. Lawler has also become a popular and influential blogger, at both "Rightly Understood" at Big Think and "Postmodern Conservative," originally at First Things and currently at National Review Online.
His posts and short essays are often and widely reprinted.
The first volume of his best short essays--Allergic to Crazy--has been published by Saint And his American Heresies and Higher Education is forthcoming in 2016.
He is executive editor of the quarterly journal, Perspectives on Political Science and has been chair of the politics and literature section of the American Political Science Association. His books--Postmodernism Rightly Understood, Aliens in America, Stuck with Virtue, and Homeless and at Home in America--have been widely and positively reviewed. His American Political Rhetoric (edited with Robert Schaefer, seventh edition) is used in introductory American government courses at a sizeable number of colleges and universities.
Lawler has spoken at roughly a hundred American colleges and universities and published well over two hundred articles, chapters, and reviews in a wide variety of venues.