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| Copyright  The Case Foundation, 2008. All Rights Reserved. |
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Citizens at the Center: A New Approach to Civic Engagement is
based on interviews with experts from a number of fields. Below are
audio highlights of some of the interviews that informed the paper. You
can also download the paper or read or submit comments.
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Jane Buckingham Intelligence Group |
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"I think the hardest thing for young people is that
they are so disengaged from everything. They have seen everything in
their mind fail, and they are so used to people doing things for them
and wanting them and trying to get them that they sort of go, 'Well, if
it is that important to you that I vote, why don't you let me do it on
the Internet? If it is that important to you that I vote, why do I have
to go through this whole process where I wait for 3 hours to go in'...
One of the most telling things was a college student saying he didn't
read the paper because, if the news is that important, it will find
him, and you sort of go, that's a horrible attitude, but you also
realize he's right. You know what, it will come on someone's
BlackBerry. Someone is going to call someone on the cell phone. So they
don't have to actively pursue anything because, in their mind,
everything has actively pursued them.
"So, same thing with civic engagement, if it is that
important, why aren't you making it mandatory in my school? If it is
that important, why aren't we like Israel where we have 2 years
demanded service?
"So there is this sort of backward, 'Well, if you
don't make it important in my life, then I am not going to make it
important in my life.'" |
Bill Schambra Bradley Center for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal |
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"If you approach citizenship as something to be
found rather than something to be generated and created, I think you
would begin to have a very different result. You would find a lot more
citizenship, civic engagement, than you anticipated if you had an open
mind about what that is and the forms that it takes, and you would then
be better able to encourage it by small incremental steps rather than
the grand scheme for launching a new initiative to engage people in
public affairs." |
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Judy Woodruff "Newshour," PBS |
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"I think this generation could end up breaking all
records when it comes to finding new ways to serve others, both in the
definition of the traditional 'service' definition and then new ways of
political engagement where people stay informed differently and they
are more organized around issues.
"I mean, in many ways, our society has increasingly
moved in that direction anyway, but as you say, there is a lot of
cynicism that has grown up around that because what has happened with
interest groups is they become so focused on their own goal that they
are blinded to everything else. What I would hope for young people is
that they could find a way to both accurately lobby for and argue for
what they believe, but understand that societies don't move forwards
with 100 small groups all fighting for 100 different things, but with
people who are willing to work together. That is obviously what we
haven't had a whole lot of in the last few years." |
Joe Trippi Political Consultant |
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"I don't think people are thinking of themselves as
citizens that much anymore, and I think it's got more to do with the
failure of institutions, political parties, officer-holders do to treat
people like they're citizens. So I think it is more consumer - they're
treated, you know, more as consumers. Even the politics has become
transactional. It's, you, know, 'I'll give you a tax cut for your
vote,' 'Well, we'll give you free health care for your vote,' and it's
all transactional. There is no call to citizenship for the common good.
"But I think people hunger for that. My own view is
that I run into people, and in my work, I get a sense that there is a
deep hunger for a call to the common good and a deep hunger to be
treated as a citizen, to be a citizen, but there's no place to perform
your citizenship, and that's where I think a lot of the institutions
are failing." |
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