Julie Rose to Direct the Ethics Institute

News subtitle

The government professor studies political philosophy related to economic justice. 

Image
Image
Julie Rose
Associate 天美影视 of Government Julie Rose, who will become the Hans 鈥80 and Kate Morris Director of the Ethics Institute on July 1, has served on its faculty advisory board for several years. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)
Body

Associate 天美影视 of Government has been named the next Hans 鈥80 and Kate Morris Director of the , effective July 1.

鈥淛ulie is a brilliant scholar and teacher who has served on the Ethics Institute鈥檚 faculty advisory board for several years and has played a central role in developing the institute鈥檚 profile on campus and beyond,鈥 says . 鈥淭his is wonderful news for the institute and for Dartmouth.鈥

鈥淭he Ethics Institute serves as a hub for engagement with questions related to values鈥攈ow society should be organized and how we should lead our lives鈥攁nd it provides a space for disagreement about those values,鈥 says Rose, who takes on the leadership role as the current director, , completes his second term this spring. Bedi is the Joel Parker 1811 天美影视 in Law and Political Science. 

鈥淭he institute has been flourishing under Sonu鈥檚 leadership, so my first goal is to maintain that high bar,鈥 Rose says. 鈥淚 want to continue expanding the institute鈥檚 national and international reputation, and to continue our programming for undergraduates, while we think about areas where we can add more.鈥

Quoted
Quote

Having a central space on campus for focusing on normative questions is vital for an institution like Dartmouth that is devoted to broad inquiry.

Attribution
Julie Rose, incoming Hans 鈥80 and Kate Morris Director of the Ethics Institute

The Ethics Institute was founded in 1982 to advance the study and teaching of ethics throughout the Dartmouth community. To that end, it sponsors a range of public events and undergraduate fellowships; provides funding for teaching and research, including a postdoctoral fellowship; and promotes a from across the institution.

Rose sees an opportunity for the institute to further support Dartmouth-wide initiatives, such as Dartmouth Dialogues, which is strengthening the community鈥檚 culture of discourse across differences. 

鈥淭he Ethics Institute is a natural home for thinking more about how we can have productive, meaningful conversations across disagreement,鈥 she says. She would like to see the institute model civil discourse for undergraduates, add a fall workshop on topics of public interest in addition to its annual spring , and develop a writing residency for visiting researchers to develop and share new scholarship.

For Rose, whose research focuses on political philosophy related to issues of economic justice, 鈥渉aving a central space on campus for focusing on normative questions is vital for an institution like Dartmouth that is devoted to broad inquiry.鈥 

Similar centers at other institutions鈥攊ncluding Princeton, Stanford, and Harvard鈥斺渉ave been an integral part of my own academic training,鈥 Rose says. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been essential to the work that I do, and I鈥檝e been fortunate to see the vital role they play for colleges and universities.鈥

The Ethics Institute is distinguished by its location and Dartmouth鈥檚 intimate scale, Rose says. 鈥淥ur size allows for closer connections, and our location in a place of such natural beauty allows us to draw scholars to visit and engage with our small community. People here interact all the time across divisions, across schools. Having these kinds of personal connections matters.鈥

Rose, who joined the Dartmouth faculty in 2014, is the author of Free Time, an examination of the justice implications of an unequal distribution of unencumbered time鈥攖hat is, time free from the demands of paid work, personal and household needs, and caregiving. 鈥淚n the same way that we worry about money poverty, we should worry about time poverty and the ways in which people鈥檚 time can be made not useful to them.鈥

鈥淥ver the past 10 years of technological change, there鈥檚 been an explosion of interesting questions about the future of work, and those questions鈥攚hich involve questions about leisure鈥攈ave been at the center of my current research,鈥 she says. 

Rose earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree from Cornell University and her PhD from Princeton and went on to complete postdoctoral fellowships at Brown and Stanford and a sabbatical as Fellow-in-Residence at Harvard鈥檚 Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Ethics. She is currently associate editor of the American Political Science Review.

鈥淚 want to thank Sonu Bedi for his exemplary work guiding the Ethics Institute over the past six years,鈥 says Kotz. 鈥淲e look forward to seeing the institute continue to thrive under Julie鈥檚 leadership.鈥

Office of Communications