civics

The Good Project on Civics and Citizenship

by Danny Mucinskas

Over the past months, The Good Project team has written a series of blog posts on our views of the meaning of “good citizenship.” All of the posts are available at the links below:

Good Citizenship: A Series - Part 1 (link) (2021)

Good Citizenship: A Series - Part 2 (link) by Lynn Barendsen (2021)

Good Citizenship: A Series - Part 3 (link) (2021)

Good Citizenship: A Series - Part 4 (link) by Shelby Clark (2021)

Good Citizenship: A Series - Part 5 (link) by Danny Mucinskas (2021)

New Resource! The complete Civics Blog Series (link) (2021)

Wrestling with Good Citizenship (link) by Lynn Barendsen (2021)

In writing these essays, we were prompted to look at previous posts and resources on our site through a civic lens. We reviewed previous writings to highlight those that could be helpful in illuminating educational practices related to participatory citizenship in multiple contexts. Additionally, we looked at our dilemmas and activities databases and selected those that would be most conducive to sparking discussion and reflection related to the responsibilities and opportunities of civic action.

Below, we have compiled these materials so that they are accessible to our readers. We encourage you to peruse and use these materials with others in order to spark and guide conversations related to civic issues in your own communities!

Civics Blogs:

(All of the posts above are available in a single feed under the “civics” tag at the link here.)

Dilemmas: 

(All of the dilemmas above are available in a single feed under the “civics” tag at the link here.)

Activities

(All of the activities above are available in a single feed under the “civics” tag at the link here.)

Diving into the 5Ds: Discussing & Debating

by Shelby Clark

At The Good Project when thinking about how to resolve a difficult dilemma we often apply a framework referred to as the “5Ds.” The 5Ds include:

  1. Define: Recognize the dilemma in your life;

  2. Discuss and Debate: An outward looking step, where you consult with others regarding possible options, pros and cons, and probable consequences of various courses of action;

  3. Deliberate: An inward looking step, where you personally reflect on the various options available, and whether or not to take action;

  4. Decide: Make and potentially carry out your decision;

  5. Debrief: Reflect on the consequences of your decision and how you might handle similar decisions in the future.

To date, my colleagues and I have written several blogs that incorporate the 5Ds framework (here, here, and here). Here, I hope to dive deeper into how an individual might engage in element #2 of the 5Ds framework: discussing and debating.

The scholarly literature on discussion and debate is vast and I do not intend to cover that here; instead here are a few helpful ideas or frameworks that can guide individuals as they engage in discussing and debating dilemmas.

1. Preacher, prosecutor, politician, or scientist? In his recent book, Think Again, organizational psychologist Adam Grant points out that there are a variety of ways that we can approach discussions and arguments. If we believe our beliefs are at risk, we act like a preacher and try to protect our beliefs; if we think other people’s reasoning or logic is at fault, we attack it like a prosecutor would in court; if we want to win over others, we try to persuade them like a politician would.

While each of these modes of discussion certainly has its place, Grant argues that we should really try to act more like scientists in our discussions with one another—scientists, he notes, are “expected to doubt what [they] know, be curious about what [they] don’t know, and update [their] views based on new data… we move into scientist mode when we’re searching for the truth.”

When discussing a dilemma, which of these roles are you embodying? What would it look like for you to approach your dilemma like a scientist? Grant notes that even saying “Can we debate?” at the beginning of a discussion indicates that you are more interested in approaching a discussion as a scientist—someone interested in truth—than as a preacher, prosecutor, or politician.

2. Try to have a Better Argument: The Better Arguments Project (here) is a collaboration between the Aspen Institute, Facing History and Ourselves, and The Allstate Corporation that promotes the belief that individuals need to focus not on ceasing to argue, but on having better arguments. For them, better arguments include a focus on historical context, emotions, and recognizing power inherent in arguments, but such arguments also take five broad principles into account: 1) take winning off the table; 2) prioritize relationships and listen passionately; 3) pay attention to context; 4) embrace vulnerability; and 5) make room to transform. The Good Project has collaborated with the Better Arguments Project to create workbooks (here) focused on the idea that having better arguments can lead to good work.

What would your dilemma discussion look like if you focused on having a better argument around your dilemma?

3. Utilitarian, deontologist, or virtue ethicist? Historically, many have looked to normative ethical frameworks (here)—those that define the standards of ethical behavior—to help guide them in their thinking about what is “right.” For example, some think about what would be right for the most amount of people (here), as a utilitarian would. Utilitarianism, founded by Jeremy Bentham in the late 1700s, is primarily concerned with the consequences of an action and whether or not a particular act maximizes pleasure and minimizes pain (here) instead of whether the act itself is moral.

Deontologists (here) often believe, instead, that certain duties should be carried out and that individuals have certain inherent rights regardless of outcomes. Founded by Immanuel Kant in the 1700s, Kant argued that it was not consequences that mattered to determine whether something was moral, but rather whether the intentions or motivations of a person were good. Kant argued that certain duties were inherent to everyone (here), and, perhaps most famously, defined the “categorical imperative” as a duty that everyone must perform regardless of the end result; that is, the act itself is also the consequence and therefore morally bad acts cannot be treated as a means to a good end.

Virtue ethicists (here) believe that if you respond to a dilemma by being a good person—for example, with courage and honesty—then such habits of character will lead to a flourishing life. Founded in the teachings of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics from ancient Greece, virtue ethicists argue that habits of good character are cultivated throughout life and help individuals to respond automatically (here) with “goodness” to everyday events. Thus, it is through developing moral and intellectual character strengths, such as intellectual honesty, prudence, or responsibility, that the virtue ethicist believes an individual is able to respond with goodness to the dilemmas of life.

When discussing the pros and cons of a dilemma at hand, how do you think about what is the right course of action? Consider using our activity (here) to help you explore which of these ethical frameworks you are arguing for or against as you discuss or debate your dilemma. Perhaps you are arguing for a framework not named here, such as an ethic of care (a relationship focused ethical framework), or for a religious-based framework.

4. Learn how to “disagree well”: Paul Graham, an internet pioneer, in his 2008 essay “How to Disagree” (here) laid out in pyramidal form a hierarchy of disagreements (here).

●     At the bottom of the pyramid is name calling.

●     Individuals then progress into ad hominem arguments, wherein individuals attack a person rather than their argument.

●     Next is “responding to tone”—the person responds to the content of an argument, but simply the tone in which it is said (e.g. a “flippant” argument).

●     Next is contradiction, where one just states an opposing argument without evidence.

●     This is followed by counterargument—a contradiction combined with evidence and reasoning.

●     Following counterargument is refutation—quoting someone’s argument and explaining the mistake in this quoted argument.

●     Finally, “refuting the central point”—finding someone’s central thread, refuting it, and then giving evidence to back up one’s argument.

As you discuss a dilemma, be aware of how you are disagreeing. What level of the hierarchy of disagreement are you at?

5. Build common ground. Scholars from a number of disciplinary backgrounds indicate that the best way to change other’s minds is to first build common ground with one another rather than throwing facts and logic around. Building friendships, showing care and civility towards one another (here), and building positive emotion is the first step towards opening the door to further discussion, sparking curiosity, and potentially changing one another’s minds. Consider exploring the research of organizations like More in Common (here) to help share ways that groups can reach across divides.

When you discuss a dilemma, are you looking for ways to reach out to others? Reflect on how you are attending to positive emotions and civil discussion as you think and converse about dilemmas.

As mentioned above, there are certainly many more discussion and debate frameworks, and some may be more appropriate for your population of students or for certain discussions over others. For myself, I am naturally drawn to Grant’s framework of preachers, prosecutors, politicians, and scientists. I often feel that I can fall into all three of these “P” roles; I am known to adamantly defend my beliefs, to attempt to persuade others of the faults in their logic, and I am sometimes competitive to a fault. Yet, my work has also been focused on developing adolescents’ intellectual virtues, like curiosity, and the essence of intellectual virtues is about trying to find epistemic truth. That is, how can curiosity, or open-mindedness, or intellectual humility help us better understand “truth”? As such, through my work I am constantly reminded of my role as a scientist—I want to dig deeper, and know more, even if it goes against my own beliefs.

We’d love to hear from you if you’ve found any routines or frameworks useful in your work discussing or debating our dilemmas. Contact us here.

Wrestling with Good Citizenship

by Lynn Barendsen

Recently, I had the privilege to gather (virtually) with the Civic Collaboratory (link), a national group of civic and social innovators.  We represent a variety of domains (education, advocacy, the arts, technology and more) and are positioned across the political spectrum.  Many of us spend our days grappling with the tough questions of our day: how do we go about bridging the gaps that divide our country; what is the place of civic dialogue and social cohesion when we believe there are still deep injustices to rectify; how can we develop a shared language when we have fundamentally different truths?

I don’t have all the answers to these difficult questions, but I firmly believe we need to keep wrestling with our responses. In that spirit, I wanted to highlight some important initiatives and opportunities

  • Read Pearce Goodwin’s editorial (link) to learn more about a two-day event creating thousands of conversations between Americans with differing opinions.  The initiative is called “America Talks” and you can sign up yourself to participate by clicking here.

  • Watch the new documentary Our Towns (link), based on James and Deborah Fallows’ book, Our Towns:  100,000 Mile Journey into the Heart of America to learn about hundreds of local restorative initiatives around the country.  Both the documentary and the book illustrate how community and the building of a common language can help us to navigate our differences.

  • And if you haven’t already, please have a look at our recent blog series on Good Citizenship by clicking the button below:



New Resource! The complete Civics Blog Series

Good Citizenship: Concluding Note

 In this blog series, The Good Project team has sought to illuminate the relationship between good work and good citizenship.

  • What is Good Citizenship? explains that we have extended the 3 Es of Good Work—excellence, ethics and engagement—to elucidate the concepts of “good citizenship.”

  • Good Person, Good Worker, Good Citizen investigates the distinctions between these various roles, drawing on two key Good Project concepts: neighborly morality and ethics of roles.

  •  5Ds, 3Es and One Good Citizen applies the five “Ds” of Dilemmas (Define, Discuss, Debate, Decide, and Debrief) to analyze a difficult decision faced by a social entrepreneur. We consider her choices and reflect upon what we can surmise about both good work and good citizenship.

  •  Good Citizenship Through Good Work proposes that these two concepts may in fact coexist. Personal reflection is used to unpack ways in which good citizenship might be achieved through good work.

  •  The Hope of Global Citizenship traces some of the many meanings of citizenship; it describes the increasing importance of a newly developed concept, global citizenship.

 We are delighted to share the series in full, in PDF form. You can access the series by clicking the button below:

Good Citizenship: A Series - Part 5

by Danny Mucinskas

The Hope of Global Citizenship

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The concept of “citizenship” has become the subject of renewed interest and attention. After a relative decline in the use of the term in the second half of the twentieth century, citizenship is now more discussed than ever before. Yet while the designation of “citizen” can be traced back millennia in human history, it has a multiplicity of manifestations and interpretations that elude singular definition.

In European tradition, citizenship is commonly said to originate in the ancient Greek polis (link), city-states such as Athens and Sparta. These city-states created hierarchical social systems dominated by a small group that had the leisure to be involved in government affairs. Citizen was a status given to the few: wealthy, native-born men. In the Roman era, citizenship expanded further to encompass the free people who lived within the boundaries of the empire. The forms of citizenship practiced in antiquity subsequently had a profound influence (link) on the way that citizenship was institutionalized in states and nations in the following two thousand years. During the Renaissance, classical texts like Plato’s Republic and Cicero’s writing on politics and citizenship were rediscovered. They influenced visions and theories of the role of citizens in a political body. In societies such as the United States and the French Republic, which were (literally) revolutionary, the way that citizenship was constructed as a set of individual democratic rights stems from certain Greek and Roman ideals and practices. 

There has been no historiographic consensus (link) regarding the meaning of citizenship across time and space; it is clear that societies outside of the Greco-Roman tradition also developed complex views and systems of membership to communal and political entities. For example, in Chinese history, the state was composed of a ruler, mediating officials, and subjects (link) (or min, people in a political community), in reciprocity with one another. This schema allowed for determinations of who was and was not included in Chinese society by virtue of the interrelationships of these three groups; for example, those not subject to a ruler would not be considered part of the state. For many pre-Columbian Native Americans, tribal belonging was based on complex kinship ties (link). In the Middle East under the Ottoman Empire (link) of the nineteenth century, the closest analog to citizenship was the designation of being a subject of the empire as a multiethnic political jurisdiction (which became complicated for immigrants and those who intermarried with non-Ottoman subjects).

The smattering of cases presented above make plain that citizenship itself is far from a monolith; it has variously involved considerations of status, relationships to rulers, wealth, place, rights, kinship, interactions with other states, and various combinations thereof. Unfortunately, these designations have also been used at various times to exclude particular classes of people from being designated citizens, based on race, gender, immigration status, and other traits.

How, then, when citizenship itself is so fraught and nuanced a term, has discussion or invocation of “global citizenship” become so prominent in the educational landscape today? What does global citizenship mean? Can the idea aid in building a vision of citizenship that is at once inclusive, widely applicable, and productive?

Of course, this is a tall order. Moreover, these questions carry special weight at a time when international interdependence is at an all time high. Today, events that may appear to be geographically distant are often of immense local consequence. When civil war broke out in Syria, a humanitarian refugee crisis tested the limits of other nations to accept migrants. The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wuhan, China, quickly spread across the Earth through efficient travel networks. Carbon emissions created in large part by the world’s most developed nations will in all likelihood erase some island nations from the map in the coming decades unless drastic action is taken.

Undoubtedly, more crises will erupt. Education in global citizenship is one tool that can help humanity meet these challenges by emphasizing shared responsibility to create solutions.

Similarly to citizenship itself, global citizenship has not been universally defined and adopted; it covers wide ground and is the subject of debate and disagreement. However, a meta-review (link) of global citizenship identified several features that visions of global citizenship have in common:

It is a mode of thinking that connects the worldwide to the local;

  • It incorporates self-awareness and awareness of others, including ones who differ manifestly from those in one’s daily surroundings;

  • It is a practice that entails both empathy and knowledge of other cultures;

  • It cultivates ethical decision-making; and

  • It is actively participatory.

At the heart of global citizenship is a conviction that humans are capable of learning how to think and can as well choose to act mindfully in relation to the worldwide community. Global citizenship acknowledges interconnectedness, calls for intercultural sensitivities that bridge differences, and ultimately requires actions that are ethically-oriented. Using The Good Project’s rings of responsibility (link), global citizenship entails a sense of responsibility that extends to the outermost possible ring of international society and transcends borders and identity groups.

Thus, even though there are many versions of global citizenship in existence, and global citizenship education has been the subject of robust criticisms (for being neoliberal and inherently Eurocentric in nature in particular), the framework nonetheless holds promise. Whereas old views of citizenship, rooted in regional policies or traditions, were fragmented, inconsistent, and frequently exclusionary, global citizenship has the potential to unite and drive productive effort through connection and problem-solving.

Due to its significance and potential, frameworks of global citizenship have unsurprisingly been taken up in large numbers by educational institutions and international organizations. The adoption reflects wide-ranging support. For instance, national curricula in Canada, China, the United States, and several European countries now include global citizenship-related competencies. UNESCO has committed (link) to educational programs that foreground “global, not local issues” and that encourage learners “to become active promoters of more peaceful, tolerant, inclusive, secure and sustainable societies.” The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted in 2015 present a set of priorities, such as poverty relief, amelioration of climate change, and preservation of biodiversity, that have the potential to focus and direct efforts in global citizenship education (link) for the period ahead. The OECD has also included on its international PISA tests a measure of global competence (link) , a related construct.

 In recent years, The Good Project has collaborated with programs that prioritize forms of global citizenship education. Two examples indicate what global citizenship education can look like in practice.

  1. The Global Citizens Initiative, a program that gathers a select group of students from around the world for over a week and introduces them to ideas including “good work,” entrepreneurship, and design thinking. The hope is that graduates will design projects that solve real-life issues in their home communities and beyond.

  2. The United World Colleges movement, a network of 18 schools around the world. Gathering a deliberately diverse international cohort of students at each site, UWC has a mission for peace and a sustainable future. The first school was founded in post-World War II Europe by notable German-born educator Kurt Hahn, with a goal of fostering greater intercultural understanding at a time when international tensions were heightened. 

In seeking to foster intercultural understanding, both programs draw on psychologist Gordon Allport’s intergroup contact theory (link) , which has now been supported by many subsequent studies, The theory asserts that prejudices between groups will be reduced through contact situations, especially in conditions of equal status, intergroup cooperation, common goals, and support by social and institutional authorities.

To be sure, while not every educational experience can involve intergroup contact, the approach is one promising way to further the development of skills and mindsets related to global citizenship. Others include participatory service learning or virtual reality games that encourages meta-cognition and problem-solving.

As international interdependence deepens, the human population continues to grow, and environmental, political, and social challenges abound, global citizenship as an idea and an educational imperative can help prepare students to engage productively with others and the world. By its nature, national citizenship alone is limited in scope. In contrast, global citizenship can invigorate action in directions with wide benefits for all, in accordance with goals such as the UN SDGs, peaceful co-existence, and international collaboration. These are worthwhile goals, the absence of which have been at the root of human conflicts throughout history.

Naming these goals helps to explain why global citizenship and global citizenship education is so important: without the ability to understand one another and do work for mutual benefit, the greatest problems facing humanity may overwhelm us. The promise of global citizenship is to create collaborative solutions for future success and prosperity for all. But whether global citizenship necessarily grows out of local citizenship—or remains in some sense in conflict with it—remains to be determined.