His scholarship has focused on integrating the study of law and religion and law and politics through an understanding of historical development. His work has sought to show that human rights are by nature social, that the separation of powers of our constitutional system cannot be maintained without an ethos of virtue and that the roots of republican free government lie, not in a few phrases in the Declaration of Independence, but in a long tradition of thought and action by which our tradition of ordered liberty was developed. Frohnen has authored two books, Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism: The Legacy of Burke and Tocqueville and The New Communitarians and the Crisis of Modern Liberalism. He has edited and/or co-edited a number of volumes including American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia, which was the subject of a front page article in the New York Times, two volumes of primary source materials dealing with American constitutional history and Rethinking Rights: Historical, Political, and Philosophical Perspectives, which was named an outstanding academic title by Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries. His law review articles have appeared in journals including the George Washington Law Review, the Journal of Law & Politics at the University of Virginia, the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy and the American Journal of Jurisprudence, among others.
Conservatism
Frohnen, who serves as a Senior Fellow at the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal, was a legislative aide and speech writer for Republican Senator Spencer Abraham, and a member of the Board of the Philadelphia Society. He blogs at The Imaginative Conservative and has been identified as a political conservative. Beau Breslin, in his book The Communitarian Constitution, refers to him, along with Georgetown University Professor of Government George W. Carey and others, as a “right-wing communitarian” because of his emphasis on the importance of local social and religious associations in the formation of virtuous persons and decent lives. Frohnen, however, has also gone on the public record as an opponent of current American policies in the Muslim world. He also distanced himself from “conservative” favoring of big business, criticizing what he has called “economic policies and political cronyism... enabling economic predators.” He considers himself a “pluralist” in the tradition of Alexis de Tocqueville, Edmund Burke, Robert Nisbet, Bertrand de Jouvenel, Russell Kirk, Alasdair MacIntyre, and others often labeled conservative but most concerned with reinvigorating a diversity of local associations as necessary for human flourishing and the taming of political power.