In the spirit of interfaculty collaboration, faculty and students from across the University, as well as former fellows of the Center and members of the wider Cambridge-Boston community, participate in the Center's public events, which promote philosophical reflection on some of the most challenging ethical issues in public life. Lectures and conferences are often cosponsored with other units at Harvard, including several of the professional schools.
A remarkable collection of distinguished speakers have enriched the scholarly exchanges, enlivening the discussions with their presence and stimulating further debate in the wake of their visits. The roster includes such distinguished figures as Atul Gawande, G.A. Cohen, Ronald Dworkin, Nadine Gordimer, Alasdair MacIntyre, and Amartya Sen.
The public lecture series was established in the Center's first year through the generosity of philanthropist Obert J. Tanner.
Lectures are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.
Harvard University, September 25th-26th, 2009 Tsai Auditorium, Center for Government and International Studies 1730 Cambridge St, Cambridge MA
Friday September 25
10:00am WELCOMING REMARKS
10:15-12:30pm POLITICS BETWEEN UTOPIA AND REALITY MICHAEL WALZER - Should We Reclaim Political Utopianism MALACHI HACOHEN - Cosmopolitanism, the European Nation State and Jewish Life: Berlin and Popper
2:15-4:30pm LITERATURE AND THE HISTORY OF IDEAS SVETLANA BOYM - Dialogues on Liberty Beyond the Cold War: Isaiah Berlin and Anna Akhmatova ALAN RYAN - The History of Ideas as Psychodrama
9:00pm "MULTI-MEDIA SESSION" Featuring clips of filmed conversations with Isaiah Berlin
Saturday, September 26
10:15-12:30pm LIBERTY AND LIBERALISM JANOS KIS - Berlin's Two Concepts of Positive Liberty MARTHA NUSSBAUM - Political Liberalism and Comprehensive Liberalism
2:15-4:30pm PLURALISM: HISTORICAL ORIGINS AND PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS PRATAP MEHTA - What is Pluralism and How Does it Matter? BERNARD YACK - The Significance of Berlin's Counter-Enlightenment
5:00-6:00pm SPECIAL SESSION AMARTYA SEN - Personal Reminiscences of Isaiah Berlin
Discussants and Chairs: Ioannis Evrigenis, Peter Eli Gordon, Stanley Hoffmann, Erin Kelly, Louis Menand, Michael Rosen, Nancy Rosenblum, Emma Rothschild, T. M. Scanlon.
Sponsored by the Department of Government, the Department of Philosophy, the Center for Jewish Studies, and the Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics
Setting the Framework for the Question of Institutional Corruption
Lawrence Lessig Director, Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics; Professor, Harvard Law School
Thursday, 08 October 2009 04:30 PM
Starr Auditorium, Harvard Kennedy School
Center Director and HLS professor Lawrence Lessig delivered the first lecture of the 2009-10 Labs Lectures on the Question of Institutional Corruption.
View Professor Lessig's lecture:
Summary
In his inaugural lecture as director of the Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, Professor Lawrence Lessig presented both a plan of and call to action as the Center embarks on its five-year investigation of the problem of institutional corruption. Professor Lessig described the general methodological framework within which the Center's "Lab" will operate as they engage in this inquiry, as well as the stages through which their research is intended to progress. Finally, Lessig tried to impress upon the audience that, as members of the University community, they are subject to a moral obligation to assist in the project of identifying and proposing remedies to this problem of corruption in its various manifestations.
Professor Lessig began his lecture by giving an overview of the diversity of factors that can have an influence on the functioning of a given institution (e.g. laws, markets, etc.), the set of which he termed an institution's "economy of influence." Having introduced this idea of an economy of influence, Lessig then went on to characterize the related idea(l) of "institutional independence." To illustrate, Lessig appealed to the framers of the Constitution, for whom institutional independence was of great concern as they architected the various governmental institutions that would eventually make up the basic structure of American society. For the framers, the aim was not, of course, to design a set of institutions that would be wholly independent, i.e. responsive to nothing at all. Rather, the aim was to design a set of "independent" institutions in the sense that these institutions would be dependent upon, i.e. responsive to, only "proper" sources of influence (with propriety of influence being determined by the intended function of a given institution). So, for instance, an "independent" legislature would be a legislature that is dependent just upon the people, an "independent" judiciary a judiciary that is dependent just upon the law, and so on and so forth. Thus, Professor Lessig argued, the way that we ought to think about the task of minimizing corruption in a given institution is as one of facilitating proper dependence and minimizing improper dependence for that institution. Or, to put the point slightly differently, we ought to see it as a task of purifying that institution's economy of influence.
Having introduced these ideas of an "economy of influence" and "institutional independence," Professor Lessig went on to introduce a third key concept underlying his understanding of the problem of institutional corruption, that of "responsibility." When coming to terms with the bad actions, there is a tendency, both within the law and our own moral psychologies, to attribute primary (perhaps even sole) responsibility for those actions to the individual who perpetrated them; this despite the fact that, as Lessig pointed out, in many such cases, those bad actions could have been prevented if some other individual(s) had taken relatively simple steps to prevent them. To illustrate, Lessig described the court case Hardwicke v. A.B.S., which involved an individual found guilty of engaging in a series of acts of sexual abuse towards pupils during his time as an employee at a boarding school. Again, there is a tendency to attribute primary (and, at least within the law, sole) responsibility for these acts to the perpetrator. But, Lessig asked, what are we to think of the various other individuals at the school who, despite their awareness of the perpetrator's ongoing abusive behavior, failed to take even minimal steps (e.g. phoning an official) to bring it to an end at a much earlier stage? Lessig maintains that we ought to attribute at least some responsibility for the perpetrator's continued abuse of these individuals in addition to the responsibility that we attribute to the bad actor. Moreover, Lessig argued, in this situation and other like it, it seems far more sensible, from a practical standpoint, to focus our attention on these individuals since they, unlike the perpetrator (presumably a quite deranged individual), are sensible targets of reformatory efforts. Thus, for both philosophical and pragmatic reasons, Lessig argued that we do would do well to shift our attention from bad actors to (morally culpable) facilitators when investigating the problem of institutional corruption.
With these three central concepts in place, Professor Lessig went on to articulate his framework for understanding the problem of institutional corruption. Institutional corruption should not, Lessig argued, be thought as exemplified by the blatantly unethical and illegal activities of individuals such as Rod Blagojevich or Jack Abramoff. Rather, Lessig argued, distinctly institutional corruption ought to be understood as activities that, despite their being in accordance with existing institutional rules, either result in or from some improper influence within that institution's economy of influence that brings about either 1) a weakening of the effectiveness of that institution, or 2) a weakening of the public's trust of that institution.
To illustrate this framework, Professor Lessig went on to discuss its application with respect to the institution that he regards as being most obviously rife with institutional corruption: the US Congress. Describing Congress's economy of influence, Professor Lessig explained the ways in which members of Congress, lobbyists, and the corporate interests that fund those lobbyists have developed a deeply entrenched interdependency (e.g. members of Congress have become reliant on lobbyists for campaign contributions during their time in office, and for employment once they leave office) that results in lobbyists and their corporate sponsors having an undue level of influence on the shape of Congressional legislation. In support of this analysis, Lessig cataloged a wide variety of cases involving Congress giving bad answers to seemingly easy policy questions (e.g. cases involving nutritional standards, copyright extension, global warming), arguing that the only way to make sense of this level of legislative incompetence is by appeal to either idiocy on the part of the legislators (an explanation that Lessig rejects as implausible) or the undue influence of lobbyists and their corporate sponsors. Worse still, Lessig went on, not only has this dependency on lobbyists and their corporate sponsors resulted in Congress being less effective (thus satisfying the framework's first criterion for institutional corruption), but it has also resulted in a severe weakening of the public's trust of the institution (thus satisfying the second criterion). In defense of this second claim, Lessig noted that in his (previous) home district in California, a dramatic 88% of citizens now assent to the claim that "money buys results."
Taking Congress as his paradigm case, Lessig went on to say that the purpose of the Lab will be to determine whether and in what form other institutions (e.g. medical research, education, journalism) are burdened by corruption of this sort. Moreover, beyond the initial stage of identifying and describing instances of institutional corruption, the end goal of the Lab, Lessig proclaimed, will be to provide policy recommendations aimed at eradicating or, at the very least, minimizing the problem.
Finally, returning to the idea of responsibility, Professor Lessig tried to impress upon the audience the idea that they, as members of the University community, were subject to moral obligation to do their part of fighting against this problem of institutional corruption. Because institutional corruption is a wrong most often perpetrated and facilitated by the privileged class, Lessig argued, the members of the University community, as members of that privileged class, are bound by a moral obligation to speak out against it. To fail to do so, he argued, would be to facilitate its existence and, thereby, to render oneself partially responsible for it.
Ryan Doerfler, Graduate Fellow in Ethics 2009-10
The Entanglement of Scholars in the Global Tobacco Epidemic
Robert Proctor Professor of the History of Science, Stanford University
Thursday, 29 October 2009 04:30 PM
Starr Auditorium
The global tobacco catastrophe lies mostly in the future. Only about 100 million people died from smoking in the 20th century, whereas we can expect about a billion deaths from cigarettes in our present century. The epidemic has many causes, but one that doesn't get enough attention is the sustaining role of academics.
Thousands of scholars from many of the world's universities have helped to service the industry, by providing technical expertise or ideological apologetics or, more directly, defending cigarette-makers in court and in regulatory hearings. Scholars from places like Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and other beacons of learning have been happy to serve, throwing up off-topic data-chaff to distract from harms, lending the imprimature of intellectual authority to the world's deadliest business enterprise. Here we'll look at the history and impact of academic collaborations, situated in the broader context of the tobacco manufacturing enterprise.
From Ayn Rand to Ken Feinberg – How Quickly the Paradigm Shifts. What Should Be the Rationale for Government Participation in the Market?
Eliot Spitzer former Governor and Attorney General, New York
Thursday, 12 November 2009 04:30 PM
Emerson Hall 105 **This is a ticketed event. See below for more information.**
Tickets are free and can be obtained in person at the Harvard Box Office at 1350 Massachusetts Avenue. Tickets are also available by phone for a fee by calling 617.496.2222.
There is a ticket limit of 2 per person. Tickets are valid until 4:15pm on the day of the lecture; ticket holders should claim their seats by that time.
Drug Companies and Medicine: What Money Can Buy
Marcia Angell Senior Lecturer in Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Thursday, 10 December 2009 04:30 PM
Starr Auditorium
David Korn Vice Provost for Research, Harvard University; Professor of Pathology, Harvard Medical School
Thursday, 11 February 2010 04:30 PM
Starr Auditorium
Money In Medicine: Sin or Salvation?
Thomas Stossel American Cancer Society Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Thursday, 04 March 2010 04:30 PM
Starr Auditorium
Everyday Corruption: How Intensifying Market Competition Leads to Abuses of Public Trust, and What Should Be Done
Robert Reich Professor of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley
Monday, 05 April 2010 04:30 PM
Location: TBD
Wall Street and Washington
Simon Johnson Ronald A. Kurtz (1954) Professor of Entrepreneurship, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology