A well-functioning democracy depends on healthy and trusted public and private institutions; an economy that provides broad-based opportunity and prosperity; tolerance and respect for one another and our differences; and a vibrant civic life. But democracy is undergoing a period of stress that some might even call decline. The challenges of our time raise questions about the role of philanthropy and whether the sector has acted aggressively and effectively to stem the decline of confidence in government, institutions, and one another. To explore where philanthropy might make more of a difference, the Kettering Foundation and the Knight Foundation invited leading thinkers on the future of our democracy to write about the challenges and opportunities for American democracy and what role philanthropy can play in addressing those challenges. You can find the 18 essays here:
A Better, Stronger America: Together
Philanthropy’s Role in Strengthening American Democracy: A Diverse Agenda
Gathering: A Prerequisite for Democracy
The Conversations of a Self-Governing People
Death and Democracy
The End of Philanthropy
Comprehensive Public Sector Reform
Philanthropy’s Techno-Solutionism Problem
Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the Twenty-First Century
To Save Democracy, First Save Society
Fear and Loathing in American Politics
Fortifying Our Democracy in an Alienated Age
Building Civic Bridges through a Lens of Racial Justice
What Philanthropies Should—and Shouldn’t—Do to Save Democracy
What Big Philanthropy Can Learn from Big Tech
An Agenda for Economic Democracy
The Enduring Insight of John Dewey
“Defactionalizing” Science
Building Connective Democracy to Combat Polarization
Conformity Culture
This series was edited by Derek Barker and Melinda Gilmore of Kettering Foundation and Sam Gill of Knight Foundation. The authors’ views expressed in these essays are their own.