Marc Landy is professor of political science at Boston College. He holds a PhD in government from Harvard University. He was the recipient of the 2009 Teaching Award chosen by the student members of the Boston College chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. His most recent book is Keeping the Republic: A Defense of American Constitutionalism (University Press of Kansas, 2024), coauthored with Dennis Hale. Hale and Landy’s article, “Taming the Modern,” appeared in the Winter 2024 issue of Public Affairs, and their review essay, “Blaming the Ref” appeared in the Winter 2024 issue of the Claremont Review of Books. His article, “The Presidency in History, Leading from the Eye of the Storm,” coauthored with Sidney Milkis, appears in The Presidency and the Political System (CQ Press, 2020). His other books include Presidential Greatness (University Press of Kansas, 2000), coauthored with Sidney Milkis, American Government: Enduring Principles, Critical Choices (Cambridge University Press, 2018), and The Environmental Protection Agency: Asking the Wrong Questions (Oxford University Press, 1994), coauthored with Marc Roberts and Steve Thomas.
Keeping the Republic: A Defense of American Constitutionalism
For a discussion of the report and how the US can respond to these threats, join Commissioners Eric Edelman and Mariah Sixkiller and Hudson’s Rebeccah Heinrichs for this live event.
Join renowned philosopher and author Bernard-Henri Lévy for a conversation with Hudson Senior Fellow Liel Leibovitz on how the attack of October 7 and the subsequent war in Gaza are likely to shape geopolitics for decades to come.
Join Hudson for a workshop with congressional, government, and industry officials to discuss the future of the American hypersonic missile program. The Space Foundation’s Major General Heather Pringle, United States Air Force (ret.), will introduce a keynote address from Congressman Doug Lamborn (R-CO). Then expert panels will discuss the future of hypersonic missile offense and defense and how members of Congress can build a bipartisan consensus about the vital US hypersonic missile program.
This threat environment is teaching American defense planners and policymakers hard lessons about the need to adapt and change the way the United States budgets, tests, acquires, and deploys new and existing weapon systems. Join Hudson for two panels that will discuss these lessons and why Washington urgently needs to apply them.