
Dr Hugh Liebert
Professor of Political Science
Director - Dawkins Scholars Program
Co-Director - American Foundations Program
Social Sciences
Hugh Liebert is Professor of Political Science, Director of the Dawkins Scholars Program, and the founding Co-Director of the American Foundations minor at the United States Military Academy. A graduate of Harvard University (BA) and the University of Chicago (PhD), he has taught at West Point since 2011. Dr. Liebert is the author or editor of seven books, including Plutarch’s Politics (2016), which won the Delba Winthrop Award for Excellence in Political Science, and Gibbon’s Christianity (2022). A specialist on the history of political thought, he has also written widely on American politics and foreign policy. He has co-edited Thinking Beyond Boundaries: Transnational Challenges to U.S. Foreign Policy (2014), American Grand Strategy and the Future of U.S. Land Power (2014), and Executive Power in Theory and Practice (2012). His articles and essays have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Texas National Security Review, The Point, Claremont Review of Books, and First Things. Dr. Liebert is currently working on a book manuscript on localism in American political thought.
Ph.D. - University of Chicago
M.A. - University of Chicago
B.A. - Harvard University
Research Interests
Political Theory, American Politics and Foreign Policy, Civil-Military Relations, Greek and Roman History and Historiography
Current Research
Localism in American political thought, Civil-military relations, Statesmanship
Selected Publications
"Liebert, H. (2022) Gibbon’s Christianity. Pennsylvania State University Press.
Liebert, H. (2016) Plutarch’s Politics. Cambridge University Press.
Liebert, H., Griswold, J., & Wilson, I. (2014) Thinking Beyond Boundaries: Transnational Challenges to U.S. Foreign Policy. Johns Hopkins University Press.
Liebert, H., and S. Nielsen. (2021) The Utility of Janowitz’s Political Awareness in Officer Education. Armed Forces & Society, 49(1), 201-6.
Liebert, H. (2022) “The Citizen and the Soldier.” The Point, 27, 91-6. "