Robert F. Pecorella

Robert F. Pecorella's picture

Associate Professor

Government and Politics
St. John's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

St. John's University

Robert F. Pecorella, Associate Professor in the Department of Government and Politics and a Vincentian Research Fellow at St. John’s University, was formerly a Professor-in-Residence with the New York State Assembly Intern Program. Professor Pecorella is the author of Community Power in a Postreform City and co-author of the Politics of Structure and Governing New York State. His articles have appeared in numerous journals including: Polity, Public Administration Review, the Journal of Urban Affairs, and the Journal of Catholic Social Thought. He is currently working on a book exploring the fit between Catholic norms of economic justice and American political culture. Dr. Pecorella holds a Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University.

Academic Background

  • Ph.D., Political Science, Pennsylvania State University

Research Interests

  • The compatibility of the values of Catholic economic justice and the principles of American liberalism, and Public Policy.

Affiliation with the Center

Senior Vincentian Research Fellow,
Class of 2003

"The professional commitment of my colleagues in the Vincentian Center to intellectual excellence has informed my own research efforts.Their personal commitment to understanding and civility has encouraged me to reassess the basis of some of my own attitudes and opinions."

Food for Thought

A Catholic university is called to become an evermore effective instrument of cultural progress for individuals as well as for society. Included among its research activities, therefore, will be a study of serious contemporary problems in areas such as the dignity of human life, the promotion of justice for all, the quality of personal and family life, the protection of nature, the search for peace and political stability, a more just sharing in the world’s resources and a new economic and political order that will better serve the human community at a national and international level.

Pope John Paul II,
Ex Corde Ecclesiae (32)