David Davenport

Research Fellow
Biography: 

David Davenport is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a senior fellow at the Ashbrook Center. He specializes in constitutional federalism, civic education, modern American conservatism, and international law.

Davenport is the former president of Pepperdine University (1985–2000). Under his leadership, the university experienced significant growth in quality and reputation. Davenport cofounded Common Sense California and the Davenport Institute for Public Engagement and Civic Leadership. He also served on the board of California Forward, a major bipartisan reform group, and was a member of Governor Schwarzenegger’s California Performance Review Commission. He was a visiting fellow at the Ashbrook Center working on civic education from 2016 to 2018.

He is a regular columnist for the Washington Examiner and his study, "Commonsense Solutions To Our Civics Crisis," was published by the Orrin G. Hatch Foundation in 2020.

He has coauthored three books with his colleague Gordon Lloyd: How Public Policy Became War (2019), Rugged Individualism: Dead or Alive? (2017), and The New Deal and Modern American Conservatism: A Defining Rivalry (2013). These books offer distinctive ways of understanding both the current and the historic debates between progressives and conservatives.  

Davenport has also contributed chapters to Hoover books on values in a free society and legal threats to American values; and has authored articles in Policy Review on “The New Diplomacy” and “The Politics of Literacy.”

Davenport earned a BA with distinction in international relations from Stanford University and a JD from the University of Kansas’s School of Law, where he was elected to Order of the Coif and earned national and international awards in moot court competitions.

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Recent Commentary

US Ballot Box Image
Analysis and Commentary

Will The Mid-Term Elections Make Any Policy Difference?

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Monday, November 3, 2014

As a Californian in a state so tilted in one political direction that few bother to run ads here, I am spared what a friend from Wisconsin, a major battleground state, describes as an endless barrage of political ads and messages this year.

Moral Debts

by David Davenportvia Hoover Digest
Tuesday, October 21, 2014

The way we deal with our debts involves more than dollars and cents. It reveals our very character as a people.

Analysis and Commentary

Houston, We've Got A First Amendment Problem

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Wednesday, October 15, 2014

It was disclosed this week that attorneys for the city of Houston, Texas have subpoenaed sermons and other writings from local ministers who are opposed to the new Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO) championed by its mayor. This would seem to be such an obvious violation of the First Amendment free speech and freedom of religion of pastors that one wonders how lawyers and judges, who presumably studied constitutional law, could have allowed it to get this far.

The International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands
Analysis and Commentary

War Crimes in Gaza: Why Isn't the International Criminal Court Part of the Solution?

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Monday, October 13, 2014

Twelve years and $1 billion ago, a new International Criminal Court was born. Its stated goal was to prosecute war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity so that rulers could not continue to commit these acts with impunity.  One naturally asks, then, why such crimes continue unabated, why after more than a decade and $1 billion of expenditures the Court has only managed to convict two Congolese warlords.

David Davenport on Townhall.com

by David Davenportvia Townhall
Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Research Fellow David Davenport discusses the differences in parenting between liberals and conservatives on Townhall.com.
 

Analysis and Commentary

Can Republicans Lose Kansas?

by David Davenportvia Townhall.com
Wednesday, September 24, 2014

David Davenport discusses the Republican party in Kanas on Townhall.com

Analysis and Commentary

Congress and War On ISIS: "Just Bomb the Place and Tell Us About It Later"

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Monday, September 22, 2014

To be fair, the constitutional questions surrounding U.S. military action against ISIS are not easy.  But those wanting Congress to play a larger role in declaring wars, and not simply defer to the Commander in Chief, have a right to be disappointed when Congress, in effect, gave itself a pass and left town early to go home and campaign. 

Analysis and Commentary

Cash for Clunkers Clunked

by David Davenportvia townhall.com
Monday, September 15, 2014

You may recall the famous Cash for Clunkers program in 2009 that attempted to stimulate the economy by giving government rebates to people who bought used cars.  The program cost taxpayers $3 billion and was widely criticized for merely accelerating decisions to buy cars, rather than producing additional sales.

Analysis and Commentary

Legal Cases Are Blowing Up the NCAA Big Business Model -- Why It Matters

by David Davenportvia Forbes.com
Monday, August 11, 2014

Venerable Kansas State football coach Bill Snyder voiced the concerns of a lot of people when he said recently that college athletics has “sold out” to “dollars and cents.”  “It’s no longer about education,” Snyder continued, but we have reached the point where schools build athletic palaces, coaches make millions and games are broadcast every night, all in the pursuit of “glitz, glitter” and gold. 

Law, Healthcare, and Finance
Analysis and Commentary

Why Obamacare Is Still On The Legal Ropes After 4 Years

by David Davenportvia Forbes.com
Monday, August 4, 2014

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is nearly 4.5 years old, yet it seems to have spent most of its life in one courtroom after another with its legal viability still hanging in the balance.  In a report issued last summer, the National Health Law Program had tracked 89 federal court challenges to the ACA.

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