28
June 2012
Past Event
What Would Jefferson Do?: UVA and the Crisis of Liberal Education

What Would Jefferson Do?: UVA and the Crisis of Liberal Education

Past Event
Hudson Institute, Washington, D.C. Headquarters
June 28, 2012
Default Event Image
28
June 2012
Past Event

1015 15th Street, N.W., 6th Floor
Washington, DC 20005

Speakers:
William Schambra,

Hudson Senior Fellow and Director, Bradley Center for Philanthropy & Civic Renewal

David W. Breneman,

Newton and Rita Meyers Professor in Economics of Education and Public Policy, University of Virginia

James W. Ceaser,

Harry F. Byrd Professor of Politics at the University of Virginia

Michael B. Poliakoff,

Policy Director at the American Council of Trustees and Alumni

In a Washington Post article published on June 22, University of Virginia Professor James Ceaser took on the abrupt decision by his university's Board of Visitors to fire President Teresa Sullivan by invoking the name of the school's founder, Thomas Jefferson, and his vision for liberal education:

"What has been lost in the secrecy surrounding the board's actions is any understanding of the educational issues at stake. News reports indicate that the board identified departments such as German and classics as a drain on resources, making them candidates for the chopping block. If true (so far the board has denied that it is), Jefferson would have argued against such cuts. He considered the study of Latin, Greek and Hebrew, as well as German, to be an essential component of the university's curriculum. And he insisted on an education that 'generates habits of application, of order, and the love of virtue.' There are financial bottom lines, and then there are academic ones."

What does the crisis at the University of Virginia teach us about the nature of liberal education in America today? Is the university properly subject to business principles like "strategic dynamism," invoked by some of the regents as they sought to remove Sullivan? How do we balance financial and academic bottom lines?

Required Reading

James W. Ceaser, What would Thomas Jefferson think of the U-Va. turmoil,? The Washington Post, June 22, 2012.

Anne D. Neal, The University of Virginia — ground zero for change, The Washington Post, June 23, 2012.

Related Events
07
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Understanding China’s Political and Institutional Foundations: A Conversation with Chenggang Xu
Featured Speakers:
Professor Chenggang Xu
Getty Images
07
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Understanding China’s Political and Institutional Foundations: A Conversation with Chenggang Xu

Join Dr. Miles Yu, senior fellow and director of Hudson’s China Center, for a conversation with Professor Xu on why misunderstanding China’s political order may create critical strategic risks for the US amid intensifying geopolitical rivalry.

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
Professor Chenggang Xu
08
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Relearning Great Power Diplomacy: A Conversation with Wess Mitchell
Featured Speakers:
Wess Mitchell
A detail photo of “A Peace Conference at the Quai d'Orsay” by William Orpen. (Wikimedia Commons)
08
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Relearning Great Power Diplomacy: A Conversation with Wess Mitchell

Join Hudson’s Peter Rough for a discussion with Wess Mitchell on the future of great power diplomacy.

A detail photo of “A Peace Conference at the Quai d'Orsay” by William Orpen. (Wikimedia Commons)
Featured Speakers:
Wess Mitchell
15
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Vanguard of Manufacturing: Fortifying US National Security
Featured Speakers:
John Maslin
Austin Grey
Hon. Peter J. F. Meijer
Patrick Hunt
Julius Krein
Moderator:
Getty Images
15
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Vanguard of Manufacturing: Fortifying US National Security

Join Hudson Institute for a conference on the future of America’s industrial base.

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
John Maslin
Austin Grey
Hon. Peter J. F. Meijer
Patrick Hunt
Julius Krein
Moderator:
16
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
CCP Committee Chairman John Moolenaar on the State of US-China Relations
Featured Speakers:
Congressman John Moolenaar
Getty Images
16
October 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
CCP Committee Chairman John Moolenaar on the State of US-China Relations

Congressman John Moolenaar (R-MI), chairman of the House Select Committee on the CCP, will join Hudson Senior Fellow David Feith to discuss how Washington should approach the US-China relationship in an era of rising geopolitical competition.

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
Congressman John Moolenaar