Persuasion Book

Josh has completed his book manuscript on persuasion. To be truly persuasive, you need to adopt the “persuader’s mindset,” use the psychology of persuasion to your advantage, and adopt tested techniques. His literary agent is shopping the book to commercial publishers.

The Politics of Place: Montesquieu, Particularism, and Pursuit of Liberty

Many Enlightenment thinkers sought to discover the right political order for all times and all places, and scholars often view Montesquieu as working within this project. In this reassessment of Montesquieu's political thought, Joshua Bandoch finds that Montesquieu broke from this ideal and, by taking into account the variation of societies, offered a more fruitful approach to the study of politics.

Through a careful reading of Montesquieu's political writings, Bandoch shows that for Montesquieu the politics, economics, and morals of a society must fit a particular place and its people. As long as states commit to pursuing security, liberty, and prosperity, states can -- indeed, should -- define and advance these goals in their own particular ways. Montesquieu saw that the circumstances of a place -- its religion, commerce, laws, institutions, physical environment, and mores -- determine the best political order for that place. In this sense, Montesquieu is the great innovator of what Bandoch calls the "politics of place." This new reading of Montesquieu also provides fresh insights into the American founding, which Montesquieu so heavily influenced. Instead of having discerned the "right" political order, Bandoch argues, the Founders instituted a good political order, of which there are numerous versions.

Available in paperback and hardcover on Amazon.

Praise for the book from the back cover:

“This is a careful and rewarding study of The Spirit of the Laws, one that prompts the reader to rethink not just Montesquieu but also the relationship between liberalism and universalism.” - Dennis Rasmussen, Tufts University

““By focusing on Montesquieu’s subtle use of political and subpolitical variables, Joshua Bandoch points out how the French thinker’s ideas can contribute to contemporary debates about the good society and national character. This book will thus be of interest to a wide audience of political scientists, philosophers, sociologists, and historians.” - Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University