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Politics Department
To contact the Department:
Department of Politics
University of Dallas
1845 E Northgate Dr.
Irving, TX 75062
Telephone: 972.721.5023
Fax: 972.721.4007
Email: poldept@udallas.edu
The Politics Department office is located on the second floor of the Braniff building.
The Chair of the Politics Department is Dr. Richard Dougherty.
Telephone: 972.721.5043
Email: doughr@udallas.edu
The Director of Graduate Studies in Politics is Dr. Leo Paul de Alvarez.
Telephone: 972.721.5344
Email: alvarez@udallas.edu
The Administrative Assistant of the Politics Department is Nate Sheely.
Telephone: 972.721.5023
Email: poldept@udallas.edu
The Politics Program
Founded by the nationally renowned scholar Willmoore Kendall, the Politics Program has gained national acclaim for teaching excellence, and for
a commitment to forming broadly educated citizens and scholars. Our graduates
have gone on to teach at leading colleges and universities, to clerk for justices
of the Supreme Court, and to hold high positions in presidential administrations.
The Politics Program of the University of Dallas is unique in American higher education
today. The program combines the study of timeless classics of Western political
thought with rigorous exploration of contemporary American politics and international
affairs. We focus on the great themes and issues of political thought and experience:
justice, equality, liberty, morality, religion, and human nature. Through a curriculum
that ranges from the Greek polis, through the great Catholic thinkers of the
Middle Ages, to the politics of contemporary liberal democracies, we challenge
each student to master the most rewarding political works of the Western tradition
and the American experiment in self-government.
Politics Department Statement of Purpose
Politics is the activity of the polis (city), as athletics is the activity of the athlete. The polis, according to Aristotle, is the association whose purpose is the complete life.
Politics, therefore, includes all the activities whose end is the complete human
life. Political philosophy is the reflection upon or the attempt to understand
the nature of these activities. Political philosophy, therefore, as understood
at the University of Dallas, is a philosophical discipline concerned with the
whole range of human actions to be found in the context of the polis.
Specifically, the department has the following objectives:
First: The general purpose of the department is to promote a critical understanding of
political phenomena, an understanding of the nature of political life and its
relation to human life as a whole. Accordingly, courses are designed to present
conflicting points of view on a great variety of important political questions.
Sustained and systematic analysis of how philosophers, statesmen, and poets -
ancient as well as modern - have answered these questions enlarges intellectual
horizons and cultivates analytical and critical skills. Readings are therefore
selected with a view to engaging the student in controversy, for controversy
is of the essence in politics.
Second: The department seeks to promote enlightened and public-spirited citizenship. This
requires understanding of the principles and purposes of our regime, as well
as some personal involvement in, or commitment to, the larger political community.
One of the distinctive features of the department is its emphasis on American
statesmanship and the great controversies that have shaped the character of our
people. The curriculum attempts to relate the political, legal, and philosophical
aspects of our heritage to contemporary questions.
Third: Together with the other liberal arts, the department seeks to promote civility.
Civility requires, first, the capacity to appreciate what is to be said on diverse
sides of an issue. Secondly, it requires a capacity to participate in serious
dialogue, which in turn requires seriousness about the ends of learning and the
ends of action. Finally, civility requires some degree of detachment from contemporary
affairs, for total involvement in the present narrows and distorts our vision.
Fourth: The department seeks to preserve the great tradition of political wisdom, theoretical
and practical, against modes of thought that assail or abandon it. This requires
an understanding and critique of these various modes of thought.
Fifth: The department tries to prepare some students for active political life. This requires
the study of politics from the perspective of the statesman as well as from the
perspective of the citizen.
Sixth: The department seeks to prepare some students for graduate study in political science,
or for training in the professional fields of law, public administration, diplomacy,
and related fields.
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