Andrew Sabl

AREAS OF INTEREST

Normative Analysis
Political Ethics
Political Theory

RECENT BOOKS & PUBLICATIONS

Hume's Politics: Coordination and Crisis in the History of England
Ruling Passions: Political Offices and Democratic Ethics
Obama cannot be an activist, an organizer and a legislator at the same time

Obama cannot be an activist, an organizer and a legislator at the same time. He is right to redefine himself but has not successfully made one coherent role his own. The careful study of these three political roles suggests how he can proceed.

TDS is pleased to publish this Strategy Memo by Andrew Sabl, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at UCLA and the author of Ruling Passions: Political Offices and Democratic Ethics.

Professor of Public Policy and Political Science
Public Policy
Ph.D., Political Science (Harvard University, 1997)
sabl@ucla.edu
310-825-7196
310-206-0337

NOTE: Professor Sabl will be on leave, as of the end of Fall quarter 2012, until the beginning of Fall quarter 2014, visiting first in the Politics department at Princeton (Spring 2013) and then in the Ethics, Politics and Economics Program at Yale (2013-14). He will not be in residence, though he will continue to check his email.

Andrew Sabl is a political theorist whose research focuses on political ethics; democratic and constitutional theory; theories of toleration and political pluralism, and, most recently, the political theory of David Hume and questions of leadership and coordination.

Sabl's research combines an interest in historical and contemporary political theory and ethics with a focus on live questions of politics and policy. His first book Ruling Passions: Political Offices and Democratic Ethics (Princeton University Press, 2002) attempted to discuss systematically, through both theory and biographical examples, the range of political action that takes place, and ought to take place, in a pluralistic, constitutional democracy such as the United States, and the range of character dispositions required in the leaders who facilitate each type of action. This theme of moral pluralism in politics has run throughout his early work. His second book, Hume's Politics: Coordination and Crisis in the History of England (Princeton University Press, forthcoming in 2012) in effect continues, through a reconstruction of David Hume's political thought, the enterprise of exploring how political theory both shapes and is shaped by political actors' concrete choices. It reads Hume's political thought as a theory of dynamic coordination: how various solutions to coordination problems arise, gain strength, become objects of dispute, and either solidify as fundamental conventions of a polity, more or less unquestioned and unquestionable, or fade out over time. 

Sabl received his Ph.D. in political science and a B.A. summa cum laude in government from Harvard University. Before coming to UCLA he taught at Vanderbilt University, and he has held visiting positions at Williams and Harvard as well as a Harvard postdoctoral fellowship. His research credentials include an American Council of Learned Societies fellowship (2003-4) and the Leo Strauss Award of the American Political Science Association for Best Dissertation in Political Philosophy (1997). Besides the two books, his work includes many articles—with few exceptions, containing material not appearing in the books—in Political Theory, the Journal of Political Philosophy, Polity, the American Journal of Political Science, NOMOS, the Journal of Moral Philosophy, the Election Law Journal, and other publications.

[For more information and a longer list of downloadable articles please click on the "blog" link above, which connects to my page on academia.edu—AS.]

Andrew Sabl

Headshot: 
First Name: 
Andrew
Last Name: 
Sabl
Position: 
Professor of Public Policy and Political Science
Degrees: 
Ph.D., Political Science (Harvard University, 1997)
Bio: 

NOTE: Professor Sabl will be on leave, as of the end of Fall quarter 2012, until the beginning of Fall quarter 2014, visiting first in the Politics department at Princeton (Spring 2013) and then in the Ethics, Politics and Economics Program at Yale (2013-14). He will not be in residence, though he will continue to check his email.

Andrew Sabl is a political theorist whose research focuses on political ethics; democratic and constitutional theory; theories of toleration and political pluralism, and, most recently, the political theory of David Hume and questions of leadership and coordination.

Sabl's research combines an interest in historical and contemporary political theory and ethics with a focus on live questions of politics and policy. His first book Ruling Passions: Political Offices and Democratic Ethics (Princeton University Press, 2002) attempted to discuss systematically, through both theory and biographical examples, the range of political action that takes place, and ought to take place, in a pluralistic, constitutional democracy such as the United States, and the range of character dispositions required in the leaders who facilitate each type of action. This theme of moral pluralism in politics has run throughout his early work. His second book, Hume's Politics: Coordination and Crisis in the History of England (Princeton University Press, forthcoming in 2012) in effect continues, through a reconstruction of David Hume's political thought, the enterprise of exploring how political theory both shapes and is shaped by political actors' concrete choices. It reads Hume's political thought as a theory of dynamic coordination: how various solutions to coordination problems arise, gain strength, become objects of dispute, and either solidify as fundamental conventions of a polity, more or less unquestioned and unquestionable, or fade out over time. 

Sabl received his Ph.D. in political science and a B.A. summa cum laude in government from Harvard University. Before coming to UCLA he taught at Vanderbilt University, and he has held visiting positions at Williams and Harvard as well as a Harvard postdoctoral fellowship. His research credentials include an American Council of Learned Societies fellowship (2003-4) and the Leo Strauss Award of the American Political Science Association for Best Dissertation in Political Philosophy (1997). Besides the two books, his work includes many articles—with few exceptions, containing material not appearing in the books—in Political Theory, the Journal of Political Philosophy, Polity, the American Journal of Political Science, NOMOS, the Journal of Moral Philosophy, the Election Law Journal, and other publications.

[For more information and a longer list of downloadable articles please click on the "blog" link above, which connects to my page on academia.edu—AS.]

Phone Number: 
310-825-7196
Email Address: 
Fax Number: 
310-206-0337
For Admins Only