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James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions

The James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions, often called simply the James Madison Program (abbreviated JMP) or the Madison Program, is a scholarly institute within the Department of Politics at Princeton University espousing a dedication "to exploring enduring questions of American constitutional law and Western political thought."[1] The Madison Program was founded in 2000 and is directed by Robert P. George, the McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University.[2]

James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions
Bobst Hall, Home of the James Madison Program
AbbreviationJames Madison Program
Named afterJames Madison
Formation2000
TypeAcademic Program
HeadquartersBobst Hall, Princeton University
Location
Director
Robert P. George
Executive Director
Bradford P. Wilson
Websitehttps://jmp.princeton.edu

While the James Madison Program states it is welcoming of all ideological tendencies, it is widely considered a conservative institute that "exists to further conservative viewpoints on campus."[3][4][5][6][7][8][9] Commentators tend to point to its predominantly conservative donors and fellows, and platforming of "far-right and extremist individuals."[3][5][7]

History edit

The Madison Program was founded in the summer of 2000 via a charter with the Department of Politics at Princeton University.[10] Early funders included Steve Forbes, the John M. Olin Foundation, and the Bradley Foundation.[11] Early speakers included liberal scholars James E. Fleming of Fordham University and Stanley N. Katz of Princeton University, and conservative ones, including Robert Bork; Christopher DeMuth, then-president of the American Enterprise Institute; Lynne Cheney, chairwoman of the National Endowment for the Humanities in the first Bush administration; and William Kristol, then-editor of The Weekly Standard.[11]

The Program celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2010 with a lecture from columnist George Will.[12] Summer 2020 marked the 20th anniversary of the Program.

Academic programs edit

Politics departmental track edit

The Program sponsors the track in "American Ideas and Institutions" for undergraduates concentrating in Politics at Princeton. The track includes courses from American politics, political theory, and public law to allow students to "further and demonstrate their understandings of the three branches of the federal government and the values, ideas, and theories that underlie them and are animated by their workings."[13]

Undergraduate Fellows Forum edit

The Program is host to the Undergraduate Fellows Forum, a program for Princeton undergraduates to engage with fellow students on American political institutions and constitutionalism.[14] Undergraduate Fellows have included conservative as well as some liberal and socialist students, and founded such programs at Princeton as a podcast called "Woke Wednesdays"[15] and the third undergraduate chapter of the Federalist Society.[16]

James Madison Society edit

The Madison Program is host to several Visiting and Postdoctoral Fellows at Princeton every year and past Visiting Fellows become part of the James Madison Society. It consists predominantly of conservative academics, but also includes some liberal and socialist public figures.

Notable members of the James Madison Society[17]
Name Institution
John Agresto St. John's College
William B. Allen Michigan State University
Hadley P. Arkes Amherst College
Stephen Balch Texas Tech University
Mark Bauerlein Emory University
Francis J. Beckwith Baylor University
Paul O. Carrese Arizona State University
Angelo Codevilla (d. 2021) Boston University
David G. Dalin Brandeis University
Patrick Deneen University of Notre Dame
John J. DiIulio Jr. University of Pennsylvania
Donald L. Drakeman University of Notre Dame
Daniel Dreisbach American University
Jean Bethke Elshtain (d. 2013) University of Chicago
John Finnis University of Notre Dame; University of Oxford
Michael Gerhardt University of North Carolina
Mary Ann Glendon Harvard University
Jack Goldsmith Harvard University
Christopher R. Green University of Mississippi
Allen C. Guelzo Gettysburg College
Philip Hamburger Columbia University
Anne Hendershott Franciscan University of Steubenville
Matthew S. Holland Utah Valley University
Leon Kass University of Chicago; American Enterprise Institute
Charles R. Kesler Claremont McKenna College
Harvey Klehr Emory University
Robert C. Koons University of Texas at Austin
Alan Charles Kors University of Pennsylvania
Michael I. Krauss George Mason University
Peter Lawler (d. 2017) Berry College
Yuval Levin Ethics and Public Policy Center; National Affairs
Joyce Lee Malcolm George Mason University
Harvey Mansfield Harvard University
Wilfred M. McClay Hillsdale College
Lawrence Mead New York University
Kenneth P. Miller Claremont McKenna College
Vincent Phillip Muñoz University of Notre Dame
Michael New Catholic University of America
David Novak University of Toronto
Marvin Olasky Patrick Henry College
Daniel N. Robinson (d. 2018) Georgetown University; University of Oxford
Charles T. Rubin Duquesne University
Diana Schaub Loyola University Maryland
Gabriel Schoenfeld Hudson Institute
Roger Scruton (d. 2020) Oxford University; Ethics and Public Policy Center
James Reist Stoner Jr. Louisiana State University
Carol M. Swain Vanderbilt University (retired)
Carl Trueman Grove City College
Michael Uhlmann Claremont Graduate University
Bradley C.S. Watson Saint Vincent College
Cornel West Harvard University; Princeton University
Thomas G. West Hillsdale College
W. Bradford Wilcox University of Virginia
James Q. Wilson (d. 2012) Harvard University; Princeton University
Michael Zuckert University of Notre Dame

Reception edit

Conservatism edit

In 2006, Max Blumenthal wrote in The Nation that the Madison Program is not like the Center for Human Values at Princeton or the Remarque Institute at New York University, but rather serves as "a vehicle for conservative interests." Blumenthal writes that the Madison Program uses "funding from a shadowy, cultlike Catholic group and right-wing foundations" to support right-wing politics at Princeton University, even becoming "the blueprint for the right's strategy to extend and consolidate power within the university system."[5] Similar institutions at Georgetown University, New York University, and Williams College have used the Madison Program as a template for their operations.[18] In 2017, the North Carolina-based think tank NC Policy Watch reported that the James Madison Program is funded and operated by conservative philanthropists and academics to promote conservatism in higher education, and that the University of North Carolina Board of Governors considered the Madison Program a "model."[7]

In 2016, Jane Mayer wrote for The Chronicle of Higher Education noting that the Madison Program was founded with funds from the conservative John M. Olin Foundation and that the program's founding serves as part of a broader strategy for conservative billionaires to infiltrate higher education in the United States.[19] Her piece was cited by Greenpeace as demonstrative of dark money being used to deceptively promote conservative perspectives and downplay the fossil fuel industry's role in climate change.[20]

In 2019, journalist Emma Green wrote in The Atlantic that the James Madison Program serves as a conservative hub for right-wing students and academics within the "largely apolitical or vaguely liberal" politics of the Princeton University community.[4]

In 2023, Jewish Currents writers Dahlia Krutkovich and Sarah Rosen noted that the James Madison Program "is known for bringing right-wing figures to campus" and criticized its invitation of Ronen Shoval, who founded the ultranationalist Im Tirtzu, which has been described as being involved in campaigns against political progressives, academics, and anti-Zionists and having similarities to fascist groups.[6] Krutkovich and Rosen also criticized the arrival of Shoval due to his fabrication of his academic background and his calls to curtail academic freedom and freedom of speech in Israel.[6] Princeton University students and others in the Jewish community protested Shoval's arrival as well as the 2023 Israeli judicial reforms at the Center for Jewish Life on campus.[6][21]

Student publications at Princeton University such as The Daily Princetonian, Nassau Weekly, and The Princeton Progressive have described the James Madison Program as a conservative institute that "exists to further conservative viewpoints on campus" and where "Princeton's conservatives can receive cues about the status of their movement."[3][9][8] Similarly to other journalistic outlets, student journalists have pointed to its predominantly conservative donors and fellows, and platforming of "far-right and extremist individuals."[3] However, The Princeton Tory has claimed that the program "promotes political discussion and scholarship without favoring any political ideology."[22]

Director Robert P. George claims the Program is not conservative, but rather "seeks to bring competing points of view together to lift the intellectual debate on campus."[23]

Religion edit

In the 2007 book Faith in the Halls of Power, D. Michael Lindsay praised the Madison Program for enabling cooperation between Catholic and Evangelical Christians.[24]

Engaging with opposing views edit

On March 14, 2017, Robert P. George and Cornel West issued a joint statement via the Madison Program to encourage citizens to engage with people of opposing views. The statement was opened to signatories from the public; as of March 2019, there were more than 4,000 signatories.[25] Outlets noted its significance due to the juxtaposition of George's Christian conservative views with West's democratic socialist and radical democratic views.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ "Home - James Madison Program". web.princeton.edu.
  2. ^ Kirkpatrick, David D. "Robert P. George, the Conservative-Christian Big Thinker".
  3. ^ a b c d Rahin, Rooya; Shapiro, Dylan (May 18, 2023). "What you need to know about Princeton's James Madison Program". The Daily Princetonian. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  4. ^ a b Green, Emma (2019-12-29). "It's a Weird Time to Be Young and Conservative". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2023-08-30. Instead, students at Princeton who lean to the right have helped build a robust suite of conservative groups, most prominently the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions, an expansive academic center overseen by the prominent scholar Robert P. George.
  5. ^ a b c Blumenthal, Max (2006-02-23). "Princeton Tilts Right". The Nation. ISSN 0027-8378. Retrieved 2023-08-30. George has brought his conservatism to bear at Princeton through the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions, an academic center he founded in 2000 "to sustain America's experiment in ordered liberty." On the surface, the program appears modeled after institutions like Princeton's Center for Human Values and New York University's Remarque Institute. However, it functions in many ways as a vehicle for conservative interests, using funding from a shadowy, cultlike Catholic group and right-wing foundations to support gatherings of movement activists, fellowships for ideologically correct visiting professors and a cadre of conservative students. George's program has become the blueprint for the right's strategy to extend and consolidate power within the university system.
  6. ^ a b c d Krutkovich, Dahlia; Rosen, Sarah (June 8, 2023). "The Israeli Far Right's Man in Princeton". Jewish Currents. Retrieved 2023-08-30. Shoval wrapped up a yearlong appointment as a lecturer in politics at Princeton last month, and will hold the role of associate research scholar at the university's James Madison Program for American Ideals and Institutions—which is devoted to the study and promotion of conservative ideas—through the summer.
  7. ^ a b c Killian, Joe (December 18, 2017). "A look at the conservative origins of the UNC Board of Governors' "model" for a new academic center". NC Newsline. Retrieved 2023-08-30. If your interest was piqued by the UNC Board of Governors' reception of Professor Robert George last week – and their affection for his conservative James Madison program at Princeton – you may want to read up on the program, its funders and the movement to create more conservative centers across the country.
  8. ^ a b Glover, Austin (2022-12-19). "The State of Conservatism at Princeton". The Princeton Progressive. Retrieved 2023-08-30. indeed, conservatism is alive and well at Princeton University. Instead of appearing in the classroom, however, it manifests itself online, through student groups like the Tory, and in print, via posters put up by the James Madison Program advertising its public lectures.
  9. ^ a b Barkhorn, Eleanor (2004-10-14). "The Lonely Conservative". Nassau Weekly. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  10. ^ Nieli, Russ (2005). "Enhancing Intellectual Diversity on Campus--The James Madison Program at Princeton". Academic Questions. 18 (20): 27. doi:10.1007/s12129-005-1003-3.
  11. ^ a b Merritt, J.I. (8 October 2003). "Heretic in the Temple". Princeton Alumni Weekly. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  12. ^ Princeton Alumni Weekly (8 December 2010). "Madison Program marks 10th anniversary". Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  13. ^ "Program in American Ideas and Institutions". Princeton University Department of Politics. Princeton University. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  14. ^ "Undergraduate Fellows Forum | James Madison Program". jmp.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-26.
  15. ^ Sterenfeld, Ethan (2017-12-03). "Nothing Recycled". Nassau Weekly. Retrieved 2018-12-26.
  16. ^ "Students, faculty create Federalist Society chapter at the University". The Princetonian. Retrieved 2018-12-26.
  17. ^ "James Madison Society | James Madison Program". jmp.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-26.
  18. ^ Kirkpatrick, David D. (2009-12-16). "Robert P. George, the Conservative-Christian Big Thinker". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-07-31.
  19. ^ Mayer, Jane (2016-02-12). "How Right-Wing Billionaires Infiltrated Higher Education". The Chronicle of Higher Education. ISSN 0009-5982. Retrieved 2018-12-26.
  20. ^ "Dark Money: To Charles Koch, Professors Are Lobbyists". Greenpeace USA. 2016-01-28. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  21. ^ Eng, Janny; Rupertus, Annie (March 29, 2023). "Protestors flock to Princeton to oppose Israeli judicial reform as controversial lecturer speaks". The Daily Princetonian. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  22. ^ Byler, David (2010-12-02). "Conservative Groups on Campus | The Princeton Tory". The Princeton Tory. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  23. ^ "Conservative Princeton professor promotes civil discourse at UNC". newsobserver. Retrieved 2018-12-26.
  24. ^ Faith in the halls of power: how evangelicals joined the American elite, D. Michael Lindsay, Oxford University Press US, 2007, p. 86
  25. ^ "Sign the Statement: Truth Seeking, Democracy, and Freedom of Thought and Expression - A Statement by Robert P. George and Cornel West". James Madison Program. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  26. ^ Flaherty, Colleen. "Rejecting 'Campus Illiberalism'". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2023-08-30.

External links edit

  • Official website

40°20′56.3″N 74°38′58.2″W / 40.348972°N 74.649500°W / 40.348972; -74.649500

james, madison, program, american, ideals, institutions, often, called, simply, james, madison, program, abbreviated, madison, program, scholarly, institute, within, department, politics, princeton, university, espousing, dedication, exploring, enduring, quest. The James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions often called simply the James Madison Program abbreviated JMP or the Madison Program is a scholarly institute within the Department of Politics at Princeton University espousing a dedication to exploring enduring questions of American constitutional law and Western political thought 1 The Madison Program was founded in 2000 and is directed by Robert P George the McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University 2 James Madison Program in American Ideals and InstitutionsBobst Hall Home of the James Madison ProgramAbbreviationJames Madison ProgramNamed afterJames MadisonFormation2000TypeAcademic ProgramHeadquartersBobst Hall Princeton UniversityLocation83 Prospect Ave Princeton New JerseyDirectorRobert P GeorgeExecutive DirectorBradford P WilsonWebsitehttps jmp princeton eduWhile the James Madison Program states it is welcoming of all ideological tendencies it is widely considered a conservative institute that exists to further conservative viewpoints on campus 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Commentators tend to point to its predominantly conservative donors and fellows and platforming of far right and extremist individuals 3 5 7 Contents 1 History 2 Academic programs 2 1 Politics departmental track 2 2 Undergraduate Fellows Forum 2 3 James Madison Society 3 Reception 3 1 Conservatism 3 2 Religion 3 3 Engaging with opposing views 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe Madison Program was founded in the summer of 2000 via a charter with the Department of Politics at Princeton University 10 Early funders included Steve Forbes the John M Olin Foundation and the Bradley Foundation 11 Early speakers included liberal scholars James E Fleming of Fordham University and Stanley N Katz of Princeton University and conservative ones including Robert Bork Christopher DeMuth then president of the American Enterprise Institute Lynne Cheney chairwoman of the National Endowment for the Humanities in the first Bush administration and William Kristol then editor of The Weekly Standard 11 The Program celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2010 with a lecture from columnist George Will 12 Summer 2020 marked the 20th anniversary of the Program Academic programs editPolitics departmental track edit The Program sponsors the track in American Ideas and Institutions for undergraduates concentrating in Politics at Princeton The track includes courses from American politics political theory and public law to allow students to further and demonstrate their understandings of the three branches of the federal government and the values ideas and theories that underlie them and are animated by their workings 13 Undergraduate Fellows Forum edit The Program is host to the Undergraduate Fellows Forum a program for Princeton undergraduates to engage with fellow students on American political institutions and constitutionalism 14 Undergraduate Fellows have included conservative as well as some liberal and socialist students and founded such programs at Princeton as a podcast called Woke Wednesdays 15 and the third undergraduate chapter of the Federalist Society 16 James Madison Society edit The Madison Program is host to several Visiting and Postdoctoral Fellows at Princeton every year and past Visiting Fellows become part of the James Madison Society It consists predominantly of conservative academics but also includes some liberal and socialist public figures Notable members of the James Madison Society 17 Name InstitutionJohn Agresto St John s CollegeWilliam B Allen Michigan State UniversityHadley P Arkes Amherst CollegeStephen Balch Texas Tech UniversityMark Bauerlein Emory UniversityFrancis J Beckwith Baylor UniversityPaul O Carrese Arizona State UniversityAngelo Codevilla d 2021 Boston UniversityDavid G Dalin Brandeis UniversityPatrick Deneen University of Notre DameJohn J DiIulio Jr University of PennsylvaniaDonald L Drakeman University of Notre DameDaniel Dreisbach American UniversityJean Bethke Elshtain d 2013 University of ChicagoJohn Finnis University of Notre Dame University of OxfordMichael Gerhardt University of North CarolinaMary Ann Glendon Harvard UniversityJack Goldsmith Harvard UniversityChristopher R Green University of MississippiAllen C Guelzo Gettysburg CollegePhilip Hamburger Columbia UniversityAnne Hendershott Franciscan University of SteubenvilleMatthew S Holland Utah Valley UniversityLeon Kass University of Chicago American Enterprise InstituteCharles R Kesler Claremont McKenna CollegeHarvey Klehr Emory UniversityRobert C Koons University of Texas at AustinAlan Charles Kors University of PennsylvaniaMichael I Krauss George Mason UniversityPeter Lawler d 2017 Berry CollegeYuval Levin Ethics and Public Policy Center National AffairsJoyce Lee Malcolm George Mason UniversityHarvey Mansfield Harvard UniversityWilfred M McClay Hillsdale CollegeLawrence Mead New York UniversityKenneth P Miller Claremont McKenna CollegeVincent Phillip Munoz University of Notre DameMichael New Catholic University of AmericaDavid Novak University of TorontoMarvin Olasky Patrick Henry CollegeDaniel N Robinson d 2018 Georgetown University University of OxfordCharles T Rubin Duquesne UniversityDiana Schaub Loyola University MarylandGabriel Schoenfeld Hudson InstituteRoger Scruton d 2020 Oxford University Ethics and Public Policy CenterJames Reist Stoner Jr Louisiana State UniversityCarol M Swain Vanderbilt University retired Carl Trueman Grove City CollegeMichael Uhlmann Claremont Graduate UniversityBradley C S Watson Saint Vincent CollegeCornel West Harvard University Princeton UniversityThomas G West Hillsdale CollegeW Bradford Wilcox University of VirginiaJames Q Wilson d 2012 Harvard University Princeton UniversityMichael Zuckert University of Notre DameReception editConservatism edit In 2006 Max Blumenthal wrote in The Nation that the Madison Program is not like the Center for Human Values at Princeton or the Remarque Institute at New York University but rather serves as a vehicle for conservative interests Blumenthal writes that the Madison Program uses funding from a shadowy cultlike Catholic group and right wing foundations to support right wing politics at Princeton University even becoming the blueprint for the right s strategy to extend and consolidate power within the university system 5 Similar institutions at Georgetown University New York University and Williams College have used the Madison Program as a template for their operations 18 In 2017 the North Carolina based think tank NC Policy Watch reported that the James Madison Program is funded and operated by conservative philanthropists and academics to promote conservatism in higher education and that the University of North Carolina Board of Governors considered the Madison Program a model 7 In 2016 Jane Mayer wrote for The Chronicle of Higher Education noting that the Madison Program was founded with funds from the conservative John M Olin Foundation and that the program s founding serves as part of a broader strategy for conservative billionaires to infiltrate higher education in the United States 19 Her piece was cited by Greenpeace as demonstrative of dark money being used to deceptively promote conservative perspectives and downplay the fossil fuel industry s role in climate change 20 In 2019 journalist Emma Green wrote in The Atlantic that the James Madison Program serves as a conservative hub for right wing students and academics within the largely apolitical or vaguely liberal politics of the Princeton University community 4 In 2023 Jewish Currents writers Dahlia Krutkovich and Sarah Rosen noted that the James Madison Program is known for bringing right wing figures to campus and criticized its invitation of Ronen Shoval who founded the ultranationalist Im Tirtzu which has been described as being involved in campaigns against political progressives academics and anti Zionists and having similarities to fascist groups 6 Krutkovich and Rosen also criticized the arrival of Shoval due to his fabrication of his academic background and his calls to curtail academic freedom and freedom of speech in Israel 6 Princeton University students and others in the Jewish community protested Shoval s arrival as well as the 2023 Israeli judicial reforms at the Center for Jewish Life on campus 6 21 Student publications at Princeton University such as The Daily Princetonian Nassau Weekly and The Princeton Progressive have described the James Madison Program as a conservative institute that exists to further conservative viewpoints on campus and where Princeton s conservatives can receive cues about the status of their movement 3 9 8 Similarly to other journalistic outlets student journalists have pointed to its predominantly conservative donors and fellows and platforming of far right and extremist individuals 3 However The Princeton Tory has claimed that the program promotes political discussion and scholarship without favoring any political ideology 22 Director Robert P George claims the Program is not conservative but rather seeks to bring competing points of view together to lift the intellectual debate on campus 23 Religion edit In the 2007 book Faith in the Halls of Power D Michael Lindsay praised the Madison Program for enabling cooperation between Catholic and Evangelical Christians 24 Engaging with opposing views edit On March 14 2017 Robert P George and Cornel West issued a joint statement via the Madison Program to encourage citizens to engage with people of opposing views The statement was opened to signatories from the public as of March 2019 there were more than 4 000 signatories 25 Outlets noted its significance due to the juxtaposition of George s Christian conservative views with West s democratic socialist and radical democratic views 26 References edit Home James Madison Program web princeton edu Kirkpatrick David D Robert P George the Conservative Christian Big Thinker a b c d Rahin Rooya Shapiro Dylan May 18 2023 What you need to know about Princeton s James Madison Program The Daily Princetonian Retrieved 2023 08 30 a b Green Emma 2019 12 29 It s a Weird Time to Be Young and Conservative The Atlantic Retrieved 2023 08 30 Instead students at Princeton who lean to the right have helped build a robust suite of conservative groups most prominently the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions an expansive academic center overseen by the prominent scholar Robert P George a b c Blumenthal Max 2006 02 23 Princeton Tilts Right The Nation ISSN 0027 8378 Retrieved 2023 08 30 George has brought his conservatism to bear at Princeton through the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions an academic center he founded in 2000 to sustain America s experiment in ordered liberty On the surface the program appears modeled after institutions like Princeton s Center for Human Values and New York University s Remarque Institute However it functions in many ways as a vehicle for conservative interests using funding from a shadowy cultlike Catholic group and right wing foundations to support gatherings of movement activists fellowships for ideologically correct visiting professors and a cadre of conservative students George s program has become the blueprint for the right s strategy to extend and consolidate power within the university system a b c d Krutkovich Dahlia Rosen Sarah June 8 2023 The Israeli Far Right s Man in Princeton Jewish Currents Retrieved 2023 08 30 Shoval wrapped up a yearlong appointment as a lecturer in politics at Princeton last month and will hold the role of associate research scholar at the university s James Madison Program for American Ideals and Institutions which is devoted to the study and promotion of conservative ideas through the summer a b c Killian Joe December 18 2017 A look at the conservative origins of the UNC Board of Governors model for a new academic center NC Newsline Retrieved 2023 08 30 If your interest was piqued by the UNC Board of Governors reception of Professor Robert George last week and their affection for his conservative James Madison program at Princeton you may want to read up on the program its funders and the movement to create more conservative centers across the country a b Glover Austin 2022 12 19 The State of Conservatism at Princeton The Princeton Progressive Retrieved 2023 08 30 indeed conservatism is alive and well at Princeton University Instead of appearing in the classroom however it manifests itself online through student groups like the Tory and in print via posters put up by the James Madison Program advertising its public lectures a b Barkhorn Eleanor 2004 10 14 The Lonely Conservative Nassau Weekly Retrieved 2023 08 30 Nieli Russ 2005 Enhancing Intellectual Diversity on Campus The James Madison Program at Princeton Academic Questions 18 20 27 doi 10 1007 s12129 005 1003 3 a b Merritt J I 8 October 2003 Heretic in the Temple Princeton Alumni Weekly Retrieved 22 March 2019 Princeton Alumni Weekly 8 December 2010 Madison Program marks 10th anniversary Retrieved 21 March 2019 Program in American Ideas and Institutions Princeton University Department of Politics Princeton University Retrieved 21 March 2019 Undergraduate Fellows Forum James Madison Program jmp princeton edu Retrieved 2018 12 26 Sterenfeld Ethan 2017 12 03 Nothing Recycled Nassau Weekly Retrieved 2018 12 26 Students faculty create Federalist Society chapter at the University The Princetonian Retrieved 2018 12 26 James Madison Society James Madison Program jmp princeton edu Retrieved 2018 12 26 Kirkpatrick David D 2009 12 16 Robert P George the Conservative Christian Big Thinker The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2019 07 31 Mayer Jane 2016 02 12 How Right Wing Billionaires Infiltrated Higher Education The Chronicle of Higher Education ISSN 0009 5982 Retrieved 2018 12 26 Dark Money To Charles Koch Professors Are Lobbyists Greenpeace USA 2016 01 28 Retrieved 2023 08 30 Eng Janny Rupertus Annie March 29 2023 Protestors flock to Princeton to oppose Israeli judicial reform as controversial lecturer speaks The Daily Princetonian Retrieved 2023 08 30 Byler David 2010 12 02 Conservative Groups on Campus The Princeton Tory The Princeton Tory Retrieved 2023 08 30 Conservative Princeton professor promotes civil discourse at UNC newsobserver Retrieved 2018 12 26 Faith in the halls of power how evangelicals joined the American elite D Michael Lindsay Oxford University Press US 2007 p 86 Sign the Statement Truth Seeking Democracy and Freedom of Thought and Expression A Statement by Robert P George and Cornel West James Madison Program Retrieved 21 March 2019 Flaherty Colleen Rejecting Campus Illiberalism Inside Higher Ed Retrieved 2023 08 30 External links editOfficial website 40 20 56 3 N 74 38 58 2 W 40 348972 N 74 649500 W 40 348972 74 649500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions amp oldid 1194516423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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