Home > PRRI Voices > You’re Invited: Panel, New Book Exploring Religion and the American Presidency
You’re Invited: Panel, New Book Exploring Religion and the American Presidency
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux,
01.23.2012

Do you live in or near Washington, D.C.? Got plans for next Tuesday, January 30 at 9:30 am? You are most cordially invited to join the PRRI team for an engaging panel discussion of Religion and the American Presidency:

Leading scholars will explore the role religion and the candidates’ faiths will play in the 2012 general election, along with a major new book that situates the current election within its historical context. The event is hosted by the Institute for Policy Research and Catholic Studies at The Catholic University of America.

Moderated by author and NPR national religion correspondent, Barbara Bradley Hagerty, the discussion will kick off the release of a new edition of an acclaimed book on presidents and their faith, co-edited by George Mason University Professor Dr. Mark Rozell. The book, Religion and the American Presidency, reveals religion’s influence on the lives and decisions of American Presidents.

PRRI’s CEO, Dr. Robert P. Jones, and Research Director, Daniel Cox, co-authored the essay included in this book about how President Obama’s faith has shaped his political career and his presidency. Additional details about the book can be found here.

The panel will include:

  • Barbara Bradley Hagerty, an author and National Religion Correspondent for NPR
  • Dr. Melissa Deckman, Associate Professor of Political Science and Louis L. Goldstein Associate Professor of Public Affairs at Washington College
  • Dr. Robert P. Jones CEO, Public Religion Research Institute
  • Dr. Mark Rozell, Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University
  • Dr. Stephen Schneck, Director of the Institute for Policy Research and Catholic Studies at The Catholic University of America

If you can’t make it, we’ll have an audio recording of the panel available on the website for your listening pleasure. But we highly encourage you to attend; it’s sure to be a lively and intellectually engaging conversation.

To register for the event, please click here.