Angelo M. Codevilla

Angelo Codevilla is Professor Emeritus of International Relations at Boston University.  He has been a US Naval officer, an Assistant Professor at Grove City College and North Dakota State College, a US Foreign Services Officer, and a member of President-Elect Reagan’s Transition Teams within the US Department of State, in which position he dealt with Western Europe and with matters affecting the US intelligence community.

He served as a US Senate staff member dealing with oversight of the US intelligence services, and has held a professorial lecturer at Georgetown University and a Senior Research Fellow for the Hoover Institute at Stanford University.

Codevilla’s books include No Victory, No Peace (2004), Between the Alps and a Hard Place (2000),The Character of Nations (1997), Informing Statecraft: Intelligence for a New Century (1992), While Others Build (1988), and Modern France (1974). He has also translated and edited The Prince by Machiavelli (1997).

Codevilla taught at Boston University from 1995 until his retirement in 2008.


    From law to decree

    21 Feb 2012 |
    tags: democracy, Obama politics, rule of law
    Obama's health care act shows that decrees issued by government bureaucrats have displaced the rule of law.


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