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Fall 2022 Bulletin: Annual Report

American Institutions, Society & the Public Good

The inauguration of President Barack Obama, January 20th 2009.  Unrecognizable crowds in the Washington Mall. Photo by iStock.com/carterdayne

The American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences was founded by visionaries who foresaw that the nascent republic would benefit from the expertise of learned citizens to guide its development, health, and integrity through whatever challenges may arise.

Today, the clarity of that vision has never been more evident. The pandemic, the 2020 election and its aftermath, and the movement for justice and reform in the wake of continued racial injustice have demonstrated the importance of shoring up our institutions and civil society on behalf of the public good. We find ourselves in a time of deepening divides across lines of politics, race, religion, income, and opportunity. The institutions we have long turned to for leadership and information are under fire, and doubt about the credibility of the media, government, commercial enterprise, and academia is cast from many directions. Strong and responsive institutions and a healthy civil society can carry us through crises and are vitally important in their aftermath.

From these challenges springs an ever-greater need for innovation and reinvestment in America’s founding values and its promise. As the Ƶ’s report Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century notes, we are experiencing an age of surging civic participation, “of communities working to build new connections across long-standing divides, and of citizens suddenly awakening to the potential of their democratic responsibilities.” It is in times like these that members of the Ƶ, through projects in the American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good program, combine their extraordinary and diverse expertise to strengthen the relationships between our national institutions, civil society, and the American people.

Project

Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship
 

Civic Saturday with Eric Liu. Photo by Ohio & Erie Canalway Coalition.

The Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship is a multiyear project of the Ƶ. The Commission launched in 2018 to explore the factors that encourage and discourage people from becoming engaged in their communities. The Commission’s final report, Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century, seeks to improve democratic engagement in the United States with a set of thirty-one recommendations that reach across political institutions, civic culture, and civil society to revitalize American democracy by increasing representation, empowering voters, making institutions more responsive, and reinvigorating our civic life.

The Ƶ has committed to make significant progress on all thirty-one recommendations by 2026, the nation’s 250th anniversary. In collaboration with champion organizations and leaders from across the nation, who are committed to the advancement of the recommendations, the Ƶ will host public events and targeted briefings; provide expert testimony and thought leadership; convene experts and practitioners for knowledge sharing and strategy development; create op-eds and other earned media; and in other ways stand up and support the ongoing implementation of Our Common Purpose.
 

Commission Chairs
 

Danielle Allen
Harvard University

Stephen Heintz
Rockefeller Brothers Fund

Eric Liu
Citizen University

 

Project Staff
 

Kelsey Ensign
Louis W. Cabot Humanities  Policy Fellow

Darshan Goux
Program Director for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Morgan Jacobs
External Relations Officer

Zachey Kliger
Program Associate for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Jessica Lieberman
Program Officer for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Tania Munz
Chief Program Officer

Abhishek Raman
Program Officer for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Peter Robinson
Morton L. Mandel Director of Strategic Implementation

 

Funders
 

S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation

Rockefeller Brothers Fund

The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

Ford Foundation

The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation

The Suzanne Nora Johnson and David G. Johnson Foundation

The Clary Family Charitable Fund

Alan and Lauren Dachs

Sara Lee Schupf and the Lubin Family Foundation

Joan and Irwin Jacobs

Patti Saris

David M. Rubenstein
 

Commission Publications
 

The Case for Enlarging the House of Representatives, Lee Drutman, Jonathan D. Cohen, Yuval Levin, and Norman J. Ornstein (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2021)

Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2020)

The Political and Civic Engagement of Immigrants, Caroline Brettell (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2020)

The Data Driving Democracy, Christina Couch (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2020)

The Internet and Engaged Citizenship, David Karpf (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2019)
 

Woman speaking into a microphone with African American male standing next to her. Photo by Martha Stewart Photography.

 

Children painting on the ground. Photo by Vanessa Grossl.

 

People at a ribbon cutting. Photo by Garrick Black.

 

Crowd standing outside listening to a speaker. Photo by Vanessa Grossl.

 

Project

Making Justice Accessible
 

Washington DC, USA exterior of Supreme Court building marble architecture and closeup on Capital capitol hill columns pillars by entrance and sign. iStock.com/krblokhin

Unlike criminal legal proceedings, citizens are not guaranteed representation by a lawyer in civil legal cases. In fact, millions of Americans experience civil legal problems that significantly impact their well-being, safety, and stability, and most face these problems alone – without the help of a lawyer. This is known as the civil justice gap, defined as the difference between the civil legal needs of Americans and the resources available to meet those needs.

In February 2022, the Ƶ launched a two-year implementation phase of the Making Justice Accessible project in order to make progress on the recommendations in the Civil Justice for All and Measuring Civil Justice for All reports and to draw attention to significant issues that impact the sustainability and scale of efforts to close the civil justice gap. The Ƶ will build awareness of promising developments, expand support for civil justice funding, and develop a vision for a national strategy to coordinate civil justice initiatives. 

This implementation phase builds on the two projects that addressed the challenges of providing legal services to low-income Americans. The first project, Designing Legal Services for the 21st Century, produced the Civil Justice for All report, which recommends targeted investments, simplified procedures, greater coordination and new partnerships among a range of fields and sectors, and new advocates who are trained and encouraged to provide more accessible legal assistance. The second project, Data Collection and Legal Services for Low-Income Americans, produced the Measuring Civil Justice for All report, which created a blueprint for future data collection efforts, including establishing a research agenda for scholars, practitioners, and policy-makers. Participants included representatives of the courts and foundations, legal aid providers, as well as legal scholars and social scientists. The related Winter 2019 issue of æ岹ܲ on “Access to Justice” is a multidisciplinary study of the civil justice gap, examining new models for the delivery of legal aid.
 

Project Chairs
 

John Levi
Legal Services Corporation; Sidley Austin LLP

Martha Minow
Harvard Law School

 

Project Staff
 

Eduardo Gonzalez
Program Officer for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Darshan Goux
Program Director for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Tania Munz
Chief Program Officer

 

Funder
 

David M. Rubenstein
 

Project Publications
 

Measuring Civil Justice for All (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2021)

Civil Justice for All (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2020)

“Access to Justice,” æ岹ܲ, edited by Lincoln Caplan, Lance Liebman, and Rebecca Sandefur (Winter 2019)
 

Project

Commission on Reimagining Our Economy
 

Illustration of people standing in front of a graph with squiggly lines. iStock.com/DNY59

Economic uncertainty is a disruptive force in American life. In the United States today, too many families are unable to achieve the life they want despite their best efforts, too many communities have not benefited from economic growth, and too many Americans believe the economy does not work for people like them. These conditions not only harm lives and livelihoods, but they also sow distrust in our political, economic, and community institutions. The widespread belief that the economy does not give everyone a fair chance exacerbates tensions among Americans, threatening the nation’s social fabric and its democracy.

The Ƶ launched the Commission on Reimagining Our Economy (CORE) in October 2021 with the goal of rethinking the principles, metrics, narratives, and policies that shape the nation’s political economy. While policy-makers and journalists often track how the economy is doing, the Commission seeks to direct a focus onto how Americans are doing, elevating the human stakes of our economic and political systems. The Commission builds on the work of Our Common Purpose, which acknowledges that economic conditions shape the practice of democracy but does not offer recommendations specifically targeted at economic issues.

The interdisciplinary Commission comprises scholars, journalists, artists, and leaders from the faith, labor, business, education, and philanthropic communities. Through listening sessions, data collection, and a commitment to cross-partisan work, the Commission will develop bold, achievable recommendations to build an economy that works for all Americans. The Commission represents a vital endeavor to reimagine the nation’s political economy, to ease distrust, and to help the American people face the challenges of the twenty-first century.
 

Commission Chairs
 

Katherine J. Cramer
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Ann M. Fudge
formerly, Young & Rubicam Brands

Nicholas B. Lemann
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism

 

Project Staff
 

Jonathan D. Cohen
Joan and Irwin Jacobs Program Officer for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Kelsey Ensign
Louis W. Cabot Humanities  Policy Fellow

Darshan Goux
Program Director for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Victor Lopez
Program Associate for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good

Tania Munz
Chief Program Officer

 

Funders
 

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

The C&P Buttenwieser Foundation

Omidyar Network

Patti Saris

David M. Rubenstein

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