Pursuing Justice and the Common Good

CSC 33350

What does pursuing justice look like in the real world? What does it take to sustain a commitment to pursuing justice amid everyday challenges, opposition, and different visions of the good? How does a commitment to the common good differ across a range of professions, careers, and vocations? How can research contribute to the common good? This interdisciplinary course equips students to answer these questions about the practice of pursuing justice and the common good through engagement with the fields of ethics, theology, history, politics, science studies, anthropology, sociology, literature, and the arts. Whereas Just Life, the prerequisite for this course, focused on exploring what it means to live an ethical life of meaning and purpose, this course explores what it takes to live an ethical life across a range of professions and vocations, including students’ current roles as students and McNeill fellows. Through readings, lectures, discussions, exercises, engagement with exemplars, and writing assignments, students grapple with discerning opportunities for meaningful action within the context of real world constraints and the challenges of working with others to discover and pursue shared goods. By the end of the course, students will produce a plan for their summer work that integrates their learning in the course.

Students must be part of the Institute for Social Concerns McNeill Justice Fellows program to take this course.

Class Dates: Tuesdays, 5:30–8:00 p.m.
Instructor: Ryan Juskus
Credits: 3
Associated Term: Spring 2025