Education
Drury was educated at Queen"s University (Bachelor Honours, Master of Arts), in Kingston, Ontario, and York University (Doctor of Philosophy, Political Science, 1978) in Toronto, Ontario.
Drury was educated at Queen"s University (Bachelor Honours, Master of Arts), in Kingston, Ontario, and York University (Doctor of Philosophy, Political Science, 1978) in Toronto, Ontario.
She is Canada Research Chair in Social Justice at the University of Regina, in Regina, the provincial capital of Saskatchewan, Canada. In 2005, she was elected to fellowship in the Royal Society of Canada. She is a columnist for Free Inquiry magazine.
Her doctoral thesis was entitled The Concept of Natural Law.
Drury has taught Political Science and Philosophy at two western Canadian universities: first at the University of Calgary and now at the University of Regina, where she holds the Canada Research Chair in Social Justice. Several leading political philosophers consider Drury"s attacks on Strauss and his followers to be unfounded.
In his 2009 book, Straussophobia: Defending Leo Strauss and Straussians against Shadia Drury and Other Accusers, Peter Minowitz argues that Drury’s work is “plagued by exaggerations, misquotations, contradictions, factual errors, and defective documentation.” Thomas Pangle, former professor of political philosophy at Yale, has described Drury"s writings on Strauss as simplistic, incompetent, and unscholarly.
Her objective in the position is to undertake an extensive publishing program, which includes books on Saint Thomas Aquinas"s theory of justice and its relation to the current Darwinian trends, a critique of the rise of populism in Canada, an analysis of the liberal and conservative approaches to tradition (Tradition and Taboo), and a book on the relationship between Western liberalism and the growth of radical feminism.