About the 2003-2004 Lectures
The University of California, Berkeley will host the prestigious Tanner
Lectures on Human Values, a three-day event to be held from March 16
to March 18, 2004. This spring, the lectures will focus on "Reclaiming
Universalism."
Distinguished political philosopher Seyla Benhabib will deliver the
2003-2004 Tanner Lectures. Benhabib is Eugene Meyer Professor of Political
Science and Philosophy in the department of Political Science at Yale
University. Benhabib will speak on "Reclaiming Universalism: Negotiating
Republican Self-Determination and Cosmopolitan Norms" on Tuesday,
March 16, and "Democratic Iterations: The Local, the National,
and the Global " on Wednesday, March 17. All lectures will take
place from 4:10 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the Toll Room of Alumni House,
located on the Berkeley campus.
Following her lectures, Benhabib will participate in a discussion seminar
on Thursday, March 18. The seminar will take place from 4:10 p.m. to
6:30 p.m. in the Toll Room of Alumni House.
Commentators for the series will be renowned scholars Bonnie Honig,
Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University, and Senior
Research Fellow, American Bar Foundation, Chicago; Will Kymlicka, Canada
Research Chair in Political Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, Queen's
University, Ontario; and Jeremy Waldron, Maurice & Hilda Friedman
Professor of Law and Director, Center for Law and Philosophy, Columbia
Law School.
The lectures and the seminar are free and open to the public.

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Lecture Schedule
Lecture One: Reclaiming Universalism: Negotiating Republican Self-Determination
and Cosmopolitan Norms
Tuesday, March 16, 2004
4:10 p.m. 6:30 p.m., Toll Room, Alumni House
With commentary by Jeremy Waldron
Lecture Two: Democratic Iterations: The Local, the National,
and the Global
Wednesday, March 17, 2004
4:10 p.m. 6:30 p.m., Toll Room, Alumni House
With commentary by Bonnie Honig and Will Kymlicka
Seminar and Discussion
Thursday, March 18, 2004
4:10 p.m. 6:30 p.m., Toll Room, Alumni House
With commentary by Bonnie Honig, Will Kymlicka, and
Jeremy Waldron
About Seyla Benhabib
Seyla Benhabib is internationally regarded for her research and teaching
on 19th and 20th century European social and political thought, particularly
German idealism, Max Weber, The Frankfurt School, and Hannah Arendt.
She is renowned for her contributions to the history of modern political
theory and the foundations of ethics, and is also recognized as a notable
feminist theorist.
A prolific writer, Benhabib has published numerous articles and books
including: "The Claims of Culture: Equality and Diversity in the
Global Era" (2002) "Transformations of Citizenship: Dilemmas
of the Nation-State in the Era of Globalization" (2000) and "Situating
the Self: Gender, Community, and Post-Modernism in Contemporary Ethics"
(1992), which was the winner of the American Educational Studies Association's
Critics' Choice Award in 1993. Benhabib's more recent publications include:
"The Reluctant Modernism of Hannah Arendt" (1996; new edition
2003), and "The Rights of Others: Aliens, Citizens and Residents"
(The Seeley Lectures, 2004). Benhabib has been a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1995 and, in January 2004, she received
an honorary degree from the Humanistic University of Utrecht. She has
previously held the Gauss Lectures at Princeton University (1999), the
Spinoza Lectures at the University of Amsterdam (2000), and the Seeley
Lectures at the University of Cambridge (2002).
Born in 1950 in Istanbul, Turkey, Benhabib received her B.A. in philosophy
from Brandeis University in 1972 and her Ph.D. in philosophy from Yale
University in 1977. Past academic and honorary positions include chairing
the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies at Harvard University from
1997 to 2001, where she served as Professor of Government from 1993
to 2000 and was senior research fellow at the Center for European Studies.
Since 2001, she has been the Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science
and Philosophy at Yale University and Director of its program in Ethics,
Politics and Economics.
About the Commentators
Bonnie Honig
Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University
Senior Research Fellow, American Bar Foundation, Chicago
Bonnie Honig is a notable scholar in the areas of contemporary political
theory, democratic theory and feminist theory. Her research focuses
specifically on questions of legitimation, identity, constitutionalism,
nationalism, cosmopolitanism, and the politics of immigration.
Honig is the author of "Democracy and the Foreigner" (2001).
Her first book, "Political Theory and the Displacement of Politics"
(1993), was awarded the 1994 "Best First Book in Political Theory"
prize from the Foundations of Political Thought branch of the American
Political Science Association. She is also editor of "Feminist
Interpretations of Hannah Arendt" (1995) and co-editor of "Skepticism,
Individuality and Freedom: The Reluctant Liberalism of Richard Flathman"
(2002). Honig is currently writing a book tentatively titled "Has
the King Become a Tyrant? Paradoxes of Law and Democracy."
Bonnie Honig received her BA in political science from Concordia University,
Quebec, in 1980. She received her M.S.C. from the London School of Economics
in 1981, and her M.A. in political theory in 1986 and Ph.D. in 1989,
from The Johns Hopkins University. Honig is Professor of Political Science
at Northwestern University and a senior research fellow of the American
Bar Foundation.
Will Kymlicka
Canada Research Chair in Political Philosophy,
Department of Philosophy,
Queen's University, Ontario
Will Kymlicka is a leading thinker regarding issues of nationalism,
multiculturalism and citizenship. His work has helped to shape the debate
on the rights and status of ethnocultural groups in liberal democracies.
Kymlicka is the author of many books and articles, and has edited numerous
publications. His work has been translated into over 25 languages. His
best known books include "Contemporary Political Philosophy"
(1990), "Finding Our Way: Rethinking Ethnocultural Relations in
Canada" (1998), "Politics in the Vernacular: Nationalism,
Multiculturalism and Citizenship" (2001), and "Multicultural
Citizenship" (1995) which was awarded the C.B. Macpherson prize
by the Canadian Political Science Association, and the Ralph J. Bunche
award by the American Political Science Association, both in 1996.
Will Kymlicka received his BA in philosophy and politics in 1984 from
Queen's University. He earned his B. Phil. in 1986 and Ph.D. in 1987,
both from Oxford University. Since 1998 he has taught in the Department
of Philosophy at Queen's University, and in the Nationalism Studies
program at the Central European University in Budapest. Kymlicka has
been a visiting scholar throughout Europe, Canada, and the U.S. since
1986. In 2003 he was named as a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.
Jeremy Waldron
Maurice & Hilda Friedman Professor of Law,
Director, Center for Law and Philosophy,
Columbia University Law School
Jeremy Waldron is best known for his works in the area of overlap
between jurisprudence, the theory of politics, and moral and political
philosophy. He is most interested in liberal theories of rights, issues
of economic and social justice, the political significance of moral
disagreement, and the basis of our political ideals in a multicultural
society.
Waldron's most recent books include "The Dignity of Legislation"
(1999), "Law and Disagreement" (1999), and "God, Locke
and Equality" (2002). He also is widely published in many law reviews
and journals.
A native of New Zealand, Jeremy Waldron earned his BA in Otago, New
Zealand in 1974 and his LL.B in 1978. He received D.Phil. in 1986 from
Oxford University, and an honorary Doctorate in Laws from the Catholic
University of Brussels in 2003. He held lectureships in New Zealand,
Oxford, and Scotland from 1975-1987 and was a professor at the Boalt
Hall School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley from 1986-1996.
He also held the position of associate dean and chair of the Jurisprudence
and Social Policy Program at Berkeley from 1993-1994. Waldron has served
as the Maurice & Hilda Friedman Professor of Law and as the director
of the Center for Law and Philosophy at Columbia Law School since 1997.
He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.