James Madison

°Õ³ó±ðÌýCenter for Western Civilization, Thought & PolicyÌýis hosting an event on Oct. 4. Colleen Sheehan will be speaking as an invited guest on behalf of theÌýVisiting Scholars in Conservative Thought & PolicyÌýprogram addressing the CU Boulder community with her lecture,ÌýCivic Friendship in America.

Sheehan's discussion will cover how conflict has become the norm inside American politics.ÌýShe will cover how James Madison, a main architect of the Constitution, once envisioned a nation of friends. Sheehan will seek to explain Madison's concept of a harmonious state that promotes the interests and views of citizens while questioning whether or not this blueprint for America is still relevant today.

Sheehan is a former Pennsylvania state representative and former representative of the PennsylvaniaÌýState Board of Education. She is a professor of politicalÌýscience and the director of the Matthew J. Ryan Center for the Study of Free Institutions and the Public Good at Villanova University.Ìý She teaches courses in American political thought & politics and literature.

Sheehan has written multiple books on James Madison, the American Founding, and eighteenth-centuryÌýpolitics.Ìý She has articles published on similarÌýtopics in accreditedÌýjournals like William and Mary Quarterly, Georgetown Journal of Law and Public Policy, and American Political Science Review.

Students, faculty, and members of the publicÌýare encouraged to attend the lecture.ÌýThe scheduled presentation will take place in Benson Earth Sciences, Room 180, beginning at 5:30 pm.ÌýThe discussion will be followed by a Q&A session and a small reception that will wrap around 7:30 pm.Ìý.