Symposium will honor Ken I. Kersch
The life and work of Ken Kersch, an accomplished political scientist and constitutional scholar at AVŐďËů College and founding director of BCâs Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy, will be the focus of an upcoming campus event.
âConstructing the Constitutional Imagination: A Symposium in Honor of Ken I. Kersch,â will take place on February 20 in the Murray Room of the Yawkey Athletic Center, hosted and sponsored by the Clough Center; the Political Science Department and BC Law School are co-sponsors. Panels of distinguished scholarsâincluding BC Monan Professor of Law and Government Aziz Rana and OâNeill Professor of American Politics R. Shep Melnickâwill examine Kerschâs work in four areas: American Conservatism; American Liberalism; Method in Law, History, and Political Science; and The Constitution Today.
The symposium will open with remarks by Clough Center Director Jonathan Laurence, a professor of political science, and Dennis J. Wieboldt III â22, M.A. â23, a former student of Kersch and Clough Center research fellow who is now a University of Notre Dame J.D./Ph.D. student in history. Political Science Chair and Professor Gerald Easter will be the closing speaker.
Kersch, who died in November of 2024, was a professor in the Political Science Department for 17 years. He taught classes on American conservatism, political thought, constitutional development, and civil liberties and authored five books. His scholarly interests centered on the clash between conservative and liberal interpretations of the United States Constitution during the 20th century, in areas such as civil liberties, freedom of speech, separation of powers, and church-vs-state issues. Among other honors, he won the American Political Science Associationâs 2020 C. Herman Pritchett Award for the best book on law and courts.
From 2008-2012, Kersch served as director of the Clough Center, established through a donation by Gloria Clough M.Div. â90, M.S. â96 and Charles Clough â64, a University trustee associate. The center promotes interdisciplinary reflection on constitutional government in the United States and throughout the world. Under Kersch, the Clough Center welcomed distinguished scholar James Q. Wilson as a senior fellow, sponsored two undergraduates to participate in an international conference on NATO, and initiated a Junior Fellows Program for BC students with a strong interest in constitutional democracy.
âIt is fitting that so many top scholars will convene in Kenâs honor at the center that he helped found,â said Laurence. âHis work is so important to the field of constitutional law and his legacy is his intellectual influence at BC and beyond.â
âKen Kersch was a wonderful mentor and friend to me as a student at AVŐďËů College and remained so after I began the J.D./Ph.D. program in history at Notre Dame,â said Wieboldt. âIn many ways, my research continues to be motivated by a desire to answer the questions about 20th-century American constitutionalism to which Ken introduced me as an undergraduate years ago.
âWhile I and many others are certainly indebted to his academic work, Kenâs legacy will be even more profound because of the close attention that he paid to his studentsâ personal development. I last saw Ken during the summer before he passed away, and we characteristically spent at least as much time talking about my dissertation research as we did about my family, career aspirations, and how to maintain friendships in graduate school. He is sorely missed.â
The February 20 symposium will coincide with the publication of a special issue of the Journal of American Constitutional History that engages with Kerschâs work in political science, history, and law. Its co-editors are Wieboldt and Mary Ziegler, the Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law at the University of California-Berkeley, who also is speaking at the symposium.
For the full list of speakers and other details, visit the symposium website.