In the 1990s, she chaired the Council on Civil Society, a joint project of the Institute for American Values and the University of Chicago Divinity School, which issued the report A Call to Civil Society: Why Democracy Needs Moral Truths.[12]
The focus of Elshtain's work is an exploration of the relationship between politics and ethics. Much of her work concerned the parallel development of male and female gender roles as they pertain to public and private social participation. After the September 11, 2001, attacks she was one of the more visible academic supporters of US military intervention in Afghanistan and Iraq.[14]
She published over five hundred essays and authored and/or edited over twenty books, including Democracy on Trial, Just War Against Terror: The Burden of American Power in a Violent World, Jane Addams and the Dream of American Democracy, Augustine and the Limits of Politics, and Sovereignty: God, State, Self.
Elshtain contributed to national debates on the family, the roles of men and women, the state of American democracy, and international relations for more than thirty-five years.
Analysis of major works
Elshtain's importance to the United States stems both from her impact in political ethics, and also her position in society as a woman. Carlin Romano, author of America the Philosophical, explains in his work that Elshtain's aim "was not so much to lobby for specific policies as to push for good civic-minded 'individualism' over the egoism of 'bad individualism'".[15]
In one of her more popular titles, Women and War, Elshtain examines women's roles in war as contrasted against masculine roles and why these concepts are important to society.[16] Beginning by examining America's societal interpretations of gender roles during wartime (man as a brave fighter and woman as a pacifist), Elshtain argues that men may make poor civic soldiers due to the fact that they are predisposed to a dangerous kind of eager adolescence on the battlefield, while women may be enthusiastically patriotic and possess a kind of necessary maturity, which is vital to successful combat.[16]
In one of her more famous works, Democracy on Trial, Elshtain reflects on democracy in America, discussing how socio-cultural insistence on "difference" or "separatism" have evolved since the ratification of the Constitution, and how it may be detrimental to the system.[17] Elshtain does not deny the importance of difference, especially within a civic body. Rather, she recognizes that Americans are no longer acting as representative bodies in governments, which embrace separate interests and also work as a collective towards the betterment of the whole.[18] Elshtain, like James Madison, explains that American factional hostility is only a detriment to society: "one makes war with enemies: one does politics – democratic politics – with opponents".[19]
Elshtain, Jean Bethke (1973). Women and Politics: A Theoretical Analysis (PhD thesis). Waltham, Massachusetts: Brandeis University. OCLC10387651. ProQuest302671672.
——— (1995a) [1993]. Democracy on Trial. New York: Basic Books.
——— (1995b) [1987]. Women and War. New York: University of Chicago Press.
Erickson, Debra; Le Chevallier, Michael (2018). "Introduction: Jean Bethke Elshtain, Life and Work". In Erickson, Debra; Le Chevallier, Michael (eds.). Jean Bethke Elshtain: Politics, Ethics, and Society. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctvpg84t4. ISBN978-0-268-10308-8.
Paul, Diane (2002). "From Reproductive Responsibility to Reproductive Autonomy". In Parker, L. S.; Ankeny, Rachel A. (eds.). Mutating Concepts, Evolving Disciplines: Genetics, Medicine, and Society. Philosophy and Medicine. Vol. 75. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 87–105. doi:10.1007/978-94-010-0269-1. ISBN978-94-010-0269-1.