Skip to main content

11|11|25 - Reshaping Government: Possibilities and Perils - Videorecording coming soon!

Ungoverning and the Politics of Chaos:  Can We Still Make Our Constitution Work?

November 11, 2025
12:30 - 1:30 p.m.

Pitt Law School - Teplitz Courtroom - ground floor

REGISTRATION LINK  to attend the program in-person or virtually
CLE credit REGISTRATION LINK Note:  This link is to obtain CLE credits.  Please also register for the program using the link above.

You must register to attend in-person or virtually. 

The connection information is as follows for virtual attendees:

WEBINAR CONNECTION INFORMATION:
Join from PC, Mac, iPad, or Android:

Join via audio: +1 267 831 0333 US (Philadelphia) 

Webinar ID: 962 6847 5757

Guest speaker:
Russell Muirhead, Robert Clements Professor of Democracy and Politics - Dartmouth; Co-Director, Political Economy Project; Author.

Russell Muirhead serves as the Robert Clements Professor of Democracy and Politics at Dartmouth College and is Co-Director and Founder of Dartmouth’s Political Economy Project.  Earlier in his career, he held faculty positions at Williams, Harvard, and the University of Texas.  He also has served as a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives since 2020.
 
Just weeks before the 2024 presidential election, the Princeton University Press published Ungoverning: The Attack on the Administrative State and the Politics of Chaos, which was co-authored by Professor Muirhead and Professor Nancy L. Rosenblum, the Senator Joseph Clark Professor of Ethics in Politics and Governance Emerita at Harvard.  In the preface to their book, the authors stated, “We were drawn to this project because of our appreciation for the vital work of public administration.  We call the willful destruction of state capacity ungoverning.  We name it, diagnose it, spell out how it works and what it portends, and recommend what needs to be done.”
 
Their preface also contained the following warning, “Defeating ungoverning is more than the work of one election.  It will require rehabilitating the administrative state in the minds of citizens.  It will require re-creating a partisanship that contests rival approaches to governing rather than a partisanship that contests whether government should have the capacity to govern.  And it will require a nation that is alert to the peril of personal rule.”
 
This program has been approved by the Pennsylvania CLE board for 1 hour of substantive credit.  There is a fee of $30 for those seeking CLE credits. The program is free to attend for those not seeking CLE credits.
 
If attending in-person and in need of an interpreter, email kac15@pitt.edu by October 30, 2025.

Sponsored by:  The Dick Thornburgh Forum for Law & Public Policy, Institute of Politics
Co-sponsored by: Pitt Cyber, Pitt Law, David C. Frederick Honors College
 
The Dick Thornburgh Forum is grateful to the Richard King Mellon Foundation for its generous support of the Forum's Governance programs.
 
 

 

Image
Russell Muirhead