Jedediah Purdy

Jedediah Spenser Purdy (born 1974 in Chloe, West Virginia) is a professor of law at[1] Columbia Law School where he teaches courses on American Constitutional Law, Constitutional Law and Democracy and its Crisis. From 2004 to 2018[2] Purdy was a professor at Duke University teaching constitutional, environmental, and property law. Purdy is the author of two widely discussed books: For Common Things: Irony, Trust, and Commitment in America Today (1999)[3] and Being America: Liberty, Commerce and Violence in an American World (2003).

Jedediah Purdy
Born
Jedediah Spenser Purdy

1974
NationalityUnited States
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materPhillips Exeter Academy, Harvard College
Yale Law School (Class of 2001)
Scientific career
FieldsLaw
InstitutionsColumbia University

He is also the author of After Nature: A Politics for the Anthropocene (2015)[4], The Meaning of Property: Freedom, Community and the Legal Imagination (2010), and A Tolerable Anarchy: Rebels, Reactionaries, and the Making of American Freedom (2009)[5].

Purdy joined the faculty of Columbia Law School in July 2019.[1]

Biography

Purdy, the son of Wally and Deirdre Purdy,[6] was homeschooled in West Virginia until high school. He is a graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard College, where he was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa as a junior in 1996[7] and graduated as a Truman Scholar in 1997. He also graduated from Yale Law School in its Class of 2001.

After law school, he clerked for Pierre N. Leval of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York in 2002-2003. Purdy was a professor of law at Duke University from 2004 to 2019.[2]

He also served on the editorial advisory board of the Ethics & International Affairs. He was a fellow at the New America Foundation,[8] a think tank that has been described as radical centrist in orientation.[9]

Works

  • This Land Is Our Land: The Struggle for a New Commonwealth[10], Princeton University Press (October 15, 2019) ISBN 978-0691195643

Notes

  1. "Columbia Law School Welcomes Five New Members to Its Faculty". Columbia Law School. Retrieved February 29, 2020.
  2. "Jedediah S. Purdy". Columbia Law School. Retrieved February 29, 2020.
  3. "For Common Things" (Knopf), has become one of the season's meatier cultural chew toys. Kahn, Joseph P. (19 October 1999) "Shooting at the hip; With the assurance of youth, Jed Purdy challenges a culture of 'terminal irony' in an age of cool" The Boston Globe page D-1
  4. Purdy, Jedediah (2015). After Nature : A Politics for the Anthropocene. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-36822-4.
  5. Purdy, Jedediah (2010). A tolerable anarchy : rebels, reactionaries, and the making of American freedom. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-1-4000-9584-1.
  6. Sella, Marshall (September 5, 1999). "Against Irony". The New York Times Magazine.
  7. "Jedediah Purdy" (PDF). Duke University School of Law.
  8. Halstead, Ted, ed. (2004). The Real State of the Union: From the Best Minds in America, Bold Solutions to the Problems Politicians Dare Not Address. Basic Books, pp. vii and xiii. ISBN 978-0-465-05052-9.
  9. Morin, Richard; Deane, Claudia (10 December 2001). "Big Thinker. Ted Halstead’s New America Foundation Has It All: Money, Brains and Buzz". The Washington Post, "Style" section, p. 1.
  10. https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2020/04/23/great-green-hope

See also

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