Jeffrey Reiman

Battelle-Tompkins 117, (202) 885-2927, jreiman@american.edu

Areas of specialization
Philosophy and social policy, ethical theory and applied ethics, philosophy of justice, 19th and 20th century philosophy

Biography
Jeffrey Reiman is the William Fraser McDowell Professor of Philosophy at American University in Washington, D.C. He was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1942. He received his B.A. in Philosophy from Queens College in 1963, and his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Pennsylvania State University in 1968. He was a Fulbright Scholar in India during 1966-67. He joined the American University faculty in 1970, in the Center for the Administration of Justice (now called the Department of Justice, Law and Society of the School of Public Affairs). After several years of holding a joint appointment in the Justice program and the Department of Philosophy and Religion, Dr. Reiman joined the Department of Philosophy and Religion full-time in 1988, becoming Director of the Master’s Program in Philosophy and Social Policy. He was named William Fraser McDowell Professor of Philosophy in 1990. He is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi honor societies, and past president of the American University Phi Beta Kappa chapter. Dr. Reiman is the author of In Defense of Political Philosophy (1972), Justice and Modern Moral Philosophy (1990), Critical Moral Liberalism: Theory and Practice (1997), The Death Penalty: For and Against (with Louis P. Pojman, 1998), Abortion and the Ways We Value Human Life (1999), The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison: Ideology, Class, and Criminal Justice (8th edition, 2007), and more than fifty articles in philosophy and criminal justice journals and anthologies. He is co-editor (with Paul Leighton) of Criminal Justice Ethics (2001).

Courses taught
Ethical Theory, Modern Moral Problems, Western Philosophy, Democratic Theory and Human Rights, Kant's Ethics, Rawls's Theory of National and International Justice.


William Fraser McDowell Professor of Philosophy

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