Daniel Lee is Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley, and holds a courtesy appointment as an affiliated Professor of Law at the UC Berkeley School of Law. He specializes in political theory, the history of political thought, and jurisprudence. His research concerns the reception of Roman and canon law in modern political thought (especially Jean Bodin and Hugo Grotius) and their continuing influence on modern doctrines of statehood, sovereignty, rights, and international law. More generally, he has been interested in the relationship between legal science and social science in the history of ideas, as well as the foundations of deontic logic in early modern jurisprudence and social science. His wider interests in political theory also include the foundations of democratic theory, the theory of rights, constitutional theory, republicanism, and the philosophy of the social sciences.
Daniel Lee is the author of two books. The Right of Sovereignty: Jean Bodin on the Sovereign State and the Law of Nations (Oxford, 2021) examines the origins of sovereignty as the vital organizing principle of modern international law in the legal and political thought of its most influential theorist, Jean Bodin. Professor Lee explores Bodin’s creative synthesis of classical sources in history, philosophy, and the medieval legal science of Roman and canon law in crafting the fundamental rules governing state-centric politics. The Right of Sovereignty is the first book in English on Bodin’s legal and political theory to be published in nearly a half-century and surveys themes overlooked in modern Bodin scholarship: empire, war, conquest, slavery, citizenship, commerce, territory, refugees, and treaty obligations of states. Professor Lee’s first book, Popular Sovereignty in Early Modern Constitutional Thought (Oxford, 2016), traced the juridical origins of modern popular sovereignty doctrines in the legal science of the Roman law tradition.
He is currently working on three new projects. Sacrosanct is under contract with Harvard University Press. Divisions of Law is forthcoming with Oxford University Press and is a study of early modern legal science in Jean Bodin’s Juris Universi Distributio. The Science of Right traces the foundations of legal science and the ‘science of morality’ from Grotius to Hohfeld.
Professor Lee is the winner of the APSA Leo Strauss Award, the Forkosch Prize, and a Mellon Fellowship in the Columbia Society of Fellows. He serves on the Advisory Board of the Kadish Center for Morality, Law, and Public Affairs. Prior to his arrival at Berkeley, he taught political theory at the University of Toronto and Columbia University. Professor Lee holds degrees from Columbia, Oxford, and Princeton.
Education
Ph.D., Princeton