Roberts Rules of Order, and Why It Matters for Colleges and Universities Today
By (Author) Henry Martyn Robert
By (author) Christopher P. Loss
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
15th November 2021
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Higher education, tertiary education
Educational strategies and policy
Law
060.42
Hardback
160
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
A critical edition of the book that paved the way for the democratization of American higher education
If you have ever attended a town meeting or business lunch, or participated in a church group or department meeting, or served on a faculty senate or maybe just watched C-SPAN, then you have likely encountered Robert's Rules of Order. This critical edition of Henry M. Robert's essential guide to parliamentary procedure features the original text from 1876 along with a companion essay by Christopher Loss, who artfully recounts the book's publication and popular reception, and sheds light on its enduring value for one of the most vital bastions of democracy itselfthe modern university.
Loss deftly explains why Robert's simple, elegant handbook to democratic governance captured the imagination of so many ordinary citizens during the Gilded Age and how it has shaped the development of our colleges and universities ever since. He shows how Robert's rules can help faculty, administrators, and students to solve problems and overcome challenges through collaboration, disciplined thinking, trust in the facts, and honesty and fairness from all sides.
At a time when people's faith in democracy and higher education has been shaken to its core, Robert's Rules of Order offers a powerful reminder of the importance of democratic norms and practices in American life and institutions.
"The major contribution of this text is in Losss essay, which is historically-interesting and will appeal to historians of education and those interested in understanding the ways in which voluntary and civic organizations came to embrace a standardized set of governing procedures."---Lauren C. Bell, Journal of Political Science Education
Christopher P. Loss is associate professor of education and history at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of Between Citizens and the State: The Politics of American Higher Education in the 20th Century (Princeton) and the coeditor of The Convergence of K-12 and Higher Education: Policies and Programs in a Changing Era. He lives in Nashville.