Is anything in liberal education nonnegotiable? In this EIA interview, Jim Sleeper, author of "Innocents Abroad: Liberal Educators in Illiberal Societies," published in the journal's summer 2015 issue, talks about how numerous American universities are testing these limits.
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IMAGE: EMPTY CLASSROOM. VIA FLICKR. COURTESY OF DON HARDER.
More in this issue
Summer 2015 (29.2) • Review
Political Order and Political Decay: From the Industrial Revolution to the Globalization of Democracy by Francis Fukuyama
Where did strong, adaptable, accountable states come from, and why do some countries have them and others do not? Fukuyama discusses three main paths to ...
Summer 2015 (29.2) • Feature
The Responsibility to Protect Turns Ten
The Responsibility to Protect has become an established international norm associated with positive changes to the way that international society responds to genocide and mass ...
Summer 2015 (29.2) • Review Essay
Human Rights Law Without Natural Moral Rights
In his latest work, Allen Buchanan outlines a novel framework for assessing the system of international human rights law—the system that he takes to ...