Kevin Vallier

About Me

Dr. Kevin Vallier

Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toledo and author of All the Kingdoms of the World.

Some of you will be able to tell immediately upon meeting me that I am a Southerner. I hail from a small South Alabama town known as Fairhope, Alabama. Fairhope was founded by a Georgist splinter group in 1894. Georgists, if you don’t know, maintain that the deleterious effects of social inequality can be repaired largely through the public ownership and management of land, but they remain quite libertarian with respect to labor and capital; for this reason, Georgist settlers saw themselves as establishing a single tax colony. To this day, the Fairhope Single Tax Corporation owns much of the land within the old city limits. Given this history, I suppose it is fitting that I decided to become a political philosopher.

You can find my Substack here.

My grandparents and mother were educators in an area not terribly interested in education, my grandmother having earned a PhD in education at a time when most Southern women had probably never imagined the option. I love my home, but I was happy to leave. I graduated high school in 2000, leaving for Washington University in St. Louis to study physics. As you can tell, this did not last. I left Wash U a philosopher-in-training (with a PNP degree, no less!). 

 

I was lucky enough to spend a year from ’04-’05 studying philosophy of religion at St. Louis University in the philosophy department. I then transferred to Arizona, where I spent 2005-2011 learning from the grandmasters of contemporary political philosophy, including DaveTom and Jerry (not that Tom and Jerry). Jerry graciously took up the burden of advising me.

 

After completing my PhD, I spent a year in Providence, Rhode Island as a post-doc at Brown University’s Political Theory Project. I now live in Bowling Green, OH, where I am a Professor of Philosophy at the Institute of American Constitutional Thought and Leadership. From 2012-2024, I was an Assistant and Associate Professor of Philosophy at Bowling Green State University.

What Scholars Are Saying

All the Kingdoms of the World: On Radical Religious Alternatives to Liberalism (2023)

“Embodies the best of liberal learning… deeply charitable and eager to reach common ground where stalemates have long taken hold.”
Frank A
Della Torre, PhD Candidate, Baylor University
“A valuable exposition and critique of what he describes as radical religious alternatives to liberalism.”
Daniel Edward Young
Christian Scholar’s Review
“This splendid book has something for everyone… Vallier offers a bracing view of a powerful current stream of anti-liberal thought that should shatter any complacency about taking liberal political assumptions for granted.”
Elizabeth Anderson
Max Shaye Professor of Public Philosophy, University of Michigan

Trust in a Polarized Age (2020)

“Kevin Vallier has written a fantastic and timely book… This book will be a touchstone for anyone in philosophy, political science, or economics working on these issues.”
Christie Hartley
Professor of Philosophy, Georgia State University
“Social trust in the US had been declining for decades… Vallier makes a compelling case that distrust and political conflict are enmeshed in an insidious feedback loop. His solution is to reinvigorate the institutions of political liberalism.”
Nolan McCarty
Professor of Politics and Public Affairs, Princeton University
“Vallier offers a defense of liberalism that is publicly justified as an answer to political polarization.”
Chandran Kukathas
Professor of Political Theory, London School of Economics

Must Politics Be War? Restoring Our Trust in the Open Society (2019)

“A book that is as philosophically original as it is politically timely.”
Charles Larmore
Professor of Philosophy, Brown University
“Wide-ranging, deeply informed, and highly ambitious… explores the potential for public reason to build trust in deeply divided liberal societies.”
Paul Weithman
Professor of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame
“Even non-liberals have adequate moral reason to endorse a regime of liberal rights as morally binding.”
Michael C. Munger
Professor of Political Science, Duke University

Liberal Politics and Public Faith: Beyond Separation (2014)

“An ambitious, original, and very thoughtful effort to reconcile public reason with the aspirations of religious citizens.”
Jonathan Quong
Professor of Philosophy, University of Southern California
“Wide-ranging and scholarly, engagingly written… a valuable source for understanding major literature on political liberalism.”
Robert Audi
Professor of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame
“This is a truly fantastic book. Vallier has broken new ground in public reason liberalism and provided a serious alternative liberalism.”
Reviewer
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews