Calgary School

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Aerial view of the university campus.
Aerial view of the university campus.

The Calgary School is a name used to refer to a group of like-minded academics from the University of Calgary’s political science and history departments in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The term, originally a play on the Chicago School of economics, was coined by American political scientist David Rovinsky.[1]

[edit] Members

The School is not an official organization and thus has no membership list, although some academics openly identify with it.[2] There is, however, a core group referred to by The Walrus and other media sources as its members[3]:

[edit] Political philosophy

Political philosopher Leo Strauss.
Political philosopher Leo Strauss.

The School is of a decidedly conservative political leaning, and has been described by "The Walrus Magazine" as "a rambunctious, Rocky Mountain brand of libertarianism" that seeks "lower taxes, less federal government, and free markets unfettered by social programs such as medicare that keep citizens from being forced to pull up their own socks."[3]

There does, however, seem to be tension between the socially conservative and economically conservative factions within the school. Bercuson publicly criticized Morton's social policies, saying "[they] were hard to stomach for a libertarian."[4] This type of division questions whether any kind of coherent "school" can be referred to at all.

The members of the School, particularly Flanagan, are also said to be followers of the American neoconservative philosopher Leo Strauss, their detractors interpreting this as sharing his "deep suspicion of liberal democracy"[3]. Others have disagreed, saying "those who regard Straussians as masterminds manipulating [Stephen] Harper and [George W.] Bush are intellectually lazy."[5]

The political views of the School have resulted in some criticism. One former faculty member called it "the department of redneckology."[3]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Rovinsky, David. "The Ascendancy of the West in Canadian Policymaking", Policy Papers on the Americas Vol. IX, Study 2. 16 Feb 1998.
  2. ^ Cooper, Barry. "Reasons why he's 'supportin Morton'", Calgary Herald, 8 November 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d MacDonald, Marci. "The Man Behind Stephen Harper", The Walrus, October 2004.
  4. ^ McLean, Archie. "Morton would use Alberta as his 'guinea pig': Social, religious views will drive policy, expert says", Edmonton Journal, 2 December 2006.
  5. ^ Sibley, Robert. "The Making of a Negative Image (Part 2)", The Ottawa Citizen, 5 February 2006.
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