Abram Trosky teaches Ethics and Communication in Joint Professional Military Education. He has been Lecturer of Public Law and Political Theory at Framingham State University and Lecturer in Ethics and American Government at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. His research applies moral and political theory to international relations and its contemporary and historical practice. Trosky's early work critically examined the role of public opinion in just war and international normative theory. His Moral Reasoning Model adds important nuance to social psychological peace research by comparing individual and institutional justifications for the use of …
Abram Trosky teaches Ethics and Communication in Joint Professional Military Education. He has been Lecturer of Public Law and Political Theory at Framingham State University and Lecturer in Ethics and American Government at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. His research applies moral and political theory to international relations and its contemporary and historical practice. Trosky's early work critically examined the role of public opinion in just war and international normative theory. His Moral Reasoning Model adds important nuance to social psychological peace research by comparing individual and institutional justifications for the use of force.
As a member of the Group on International Perspectives on Governmental Aggression and Peace, Dr. Trosky's research has been shared widely in person and in print, including recent title chapters in International Handbooks of War, Torture, and Terror, Peace and Reconciliation. He has been an English-Speaking Union fellow in Religion and Politics, a visiting scholar in University of Melbourne’s Ashworth Centre for Social Thought and the Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna, and Clark Fellow in Global Citizenship at University of Calgary’s Consortium for Peace Studies. Outside of academia, Dr. Trosky was research associate in comparative institutional design for Cambridge-based Conflict Dynamics International.