Hope and Higher Education — The Role of Citizen Professionals

There are new resources for a "long march through the institutions and professions" of modern society that works democratizing change. That was my argument in a talk the other day at the University of Cape Town (UCT), "Democratizing Universities and the Future of Democracy - The role of citizen professionals."

Citizen professionals will be key architects of such work, in collaboration with self-organizing lay citizens.

One can see early intimations in places like Augsburg College, where their commitments to preparing "citizen nurses" and "citizen teachers" as change agents in systems. Many faculty and staff also have begun to think of themselves as "citizen professionals." The Citizen Professional Center at the University of Minnesota has gained international visibility for similar work. Albert Dzur chronicles hidden democratizing professional and institutional changes, across many fields, in "Trench Democracy," a blog for the Boston Review.

At UCT, I told the story of my first encounter with South African university students in 2002. Dr. Mzwanele Mayekeso, a lecturer in planning at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg who knew of my work on community organizing and democratic change, invited me to speak to his class.

The class, all black, about 30, mostly came from nearby townships like Soweto and Alexandra. I described traditions of empowering professional practices that the Center for Democracy and Citizenship seeks to renew, which I had seen across the South in the civil rights movement. These involved "citizen professionals," civic leaders with a large sense of public purpose who know how to work as equals in public problem solving, with their specialized knowledge "on tap not on top." Citizen teachers, citizen doctors, citizen nurses, citizen clergy, citizen city planners are examples.

The students were furious. "Why haven't we heard anything about this?" they asked. "This is why we came to the university - to learn how to go back to our communities, not to leave them, and work in an empowering way."

"If we were learning this in university, there wouldn't be the brain drain we see today." This is a story of young people's aspiration to be "world-creators," through work that is socially useful.

The student aspirations furnished a counterpoint to Ethan Zuckerman's keynote address last May to Re:Publica, the European Internet and Society conference, which Mary Hess, a friend at Luther Seminary, had drawn my attention to. The address, "The System's Broken - That's the Good News," is a skillful overview of recent change efforts in Europe, the United States, and Latin America. Zuckerman's "third way" strategy is also deeply pessimistic about any possibilities for changes such as the Wits students wanted.

Zuckerman, director of the Center for Civic Media at MIT, brought together a significant body of research which suggests that while protests can play crucial roles in highlighting injustices, and while elections are important ways to affect public policy, neither alone makes substantial social change. He analyzes movements like Occupy Wall Street, the Indignados movement in Spain, the Arab Spring, the Turkish protests in 2013 which brought more than 3 million people into the streets, and the anti-government protests in Brazil, as well as the experiences of insurgent parties like Podemos in Spain and Syriza in Greece.

Such movements, he concludes, "throughout Europe, North and South America have demonstrated huge energy and enormous popular support. But it's hard to point to tangible, systemic changes that parallel the scale of mobilizations that have taken place." Zukerman suggests a number of reasons -- protests are different than fixing problems. The internet is good at getting people out in the streets, but internet mobilizations short-circuit the relational, face to face organizing that went into earlier large movements.

The structural constraints of the global economy are increasingly severe. "We can oust bad people through protest and elect the right people and put them in power, we can protest to pressure our leaders to do the rights things, and they may not be powerful enough to give us the changes we really want."

But the challenges he outlines dwarf his strategies for change. He said that his students at MIT distrust all sorts of institutions -- schools, banks, businesses, nonprofits, churches - not simply government, and proposes that the world is dividing between "institutionalists" who work in institutions and "insurrectionists" who "believe we need to abandon these broken institutions and replace them with new, less corrupted ones or with nothing at all." Zuckerman's "third path" beyond elections and protests includes monitoring institutions from outside to holding them accountable; starting new institutions from scratch; and abandoning the idea of institutions altogether.

Such strategies may have impact. But they are not going to significantly affect the power relations of modern societies. The Wits students were hoping for something else. They wanted to change the world through their actual professions, in institutions as well as beyond them.

But why, many ask, is there reason to believe this is possible? As Aaron Schutz has observed, scholars like Gloria Ladson-Billings (especially in her marvelous book Dream-Keepers: Successful Teachers of African-American Children), have described teachers who are highly effective in motivating African Americans and other disadvantaged students by working with the unique strengths and backgrounds each child can bring to their learning. But they despair about changing the educational system.

At UCT, I outlined three resources which hold potential to crack what Max Weber called "the iron cage" of growing bureaucratization:

• New understandings of the ways technocracy has replaced relational cultures with informational cultures, brilliantly illuminated in Pope Francis' new climate encyclical, and new practices for reversing the process;
• Understandings of politics that focus on self-interests and power rather than ideology, growing from broad-based community organizing methods. There is growing evidence that these can be translated into professions and systems;
• The concept and practices of "free spaces," where people develop civic agency.

My talk summarized the argument, and my academia.edu site is reorganized to highlight these resources. They are not exhaustive but all are important. The book collection Democracy's Education is full of other examples.

I believe the discussion is just beginning.

Harry Boyte edits Democracy's Education: Public Work, Citizenship, and the Future of Colleges and Universities (Vanderbilt, 2015)

Recap of Confab Call with “21st Century Democracy” Authors

Earlier this month, we had yet another great NCDD Confab Call, this time with 55 of our members. We had a ver informative presentation from and lively discussion with prominent D&D scholars Matt Leighninger and Tina Nabatchi, all of which was centered on the lessons on public participation infrastructure that they’ve compiled into Confab bubble imagetheir new book, Public Participation for 21st Century Democracy.

If you didn’t participate in this one, you really missed out! The discussion was so lively and the questions were so rich that we couldn’t even fit it all into the 60 minute call. But don’t worry, we recorded the presentation and discussion, which you can see and hear by clicking here.

Want to learn more about Matt & Tina’s work on public participation? You can find some great downloads from their book at http://bit.ly/PP21CDresources.

Looking for more confab inspiration? We encourage you to check out some of our past Confab Calls for more great conversations and ideas.

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Delusions of Genocide & the Real Thing

On returning home from Germany, I was startled to hear a voicemail from a white supremacist campaigning for President. It repeated the old trope that there is a genocide being perpetrated on the white race. In the United States, we often throw around words like “Nazi” and “genocide.” Seinfeld’s funny “Soup Nazi” story is one thing, but ridiculous demonizing of political opposition is another. The Iowa Tea Party offered one blatant example, but so do national commentators warning of “liberal fascism” or labeling conservatives “Nazis.” We should sober up and remember what real genocide looks like.

This is a photo of some of the ovens made to dispose of bodies at the Dachau concentration camp.

Some of the ovens made to dispose of bodies at the Dachau concentration camp.

In Democracy and Leadership, one of the key virtues of democratic leadership I wrote about is moderation. Today people so often dismiss moderation, seeing it as a weakness of will, as a lack of principled character. I find that view tragic, as it inspires such polarization that even the Federal government was shut down in 2013, despite the fact that the world is watching and the credit rating for U.S. debt was downgraded in 2011. Unstable societies are risky investments, as are unjust societies.

Moderation proves to be one of the deepest challenges for democratic societies, I argued more recently in my forthcoming Uniting Mississippi. Moderation is the virtue that aims to achieve unity. If you can’t moderate differences, unified groups tear apart and become several, rather than one. At the same time, of course, there can be delusional, hateful, or simply ridiculous ideas about unity. One of them is the white supremacist’s outlook.

The white supremacist thinks that there’s a need for greater unity among white people as a race. It is one thing when a group has systematically been targeted and oppressed, such as in slavery, the Holocaust, or Apartheid. Such group solidarity in those conditions is understandable, for people need to express pride and unity in their identities as survivors of horrible atrocities and continuing prejudice. Even in such cases, however, no reasonable group calls for purity of its race. Only white supremacists believe that interracial marriage is a threat to a race.

A photo of the entrance to the gas chamber at the Dachau concentration camp, which was deceptively marked "Showers," in German.

A little over a week ago, I had the sobering opportunity to visit a real genocidal institution. The Dachau concentration camp was built for holding around 5-6 thousand imprisoned workers. By the end of World War II, it held 32,000. To deal with the mass of people and to quell their number, the Germans had created gas chambers, which could kill large groups at once. To avoid resistance to entering the gas chamber at Dachau, the Germans had labeled the door “Brausebad” – “Shower.”

Once people were killed, they were moved to the ovens, photographed in the featured image above. Part of what was so disturbing in all of this was the thoughtful reasoning that went into controlling people and disposing of them. To convince people that the “Brausebad” really was a shower, and not a gas chamber, the Nazis had installed false shower heads. For the visitors like myself, the covers were removed from many of the shower heads, revealing a closed cone above. There was no water pipe. This was simply the illusion meant to make it easier to slaughter people. Here is a photo of the covered and uncovered shower heads, side by side:

Side-by-side image of the false shower heads installed in the Dachau gas chamber, to fool people, making it easier to get them to enter the room.

Having visited the truly disturbing and sobering Dachau camp, all I could think was that the white supremacists campaigning for President are tragically misguided and absurd. Some people are so lacking in sense that they actually believe that white folks are under threat as a group. The level of such nonsense is deeply saddening.

The call I received was eerie, partly because the voice didn’t sound quite right. It was a woman’s voice, and it was somewhat realistic, but you could tell that the message was one of those recordings generated by a computer voice – just a pretty good one. It read a message that began with formulaic language I have received before from white supremacists. It said that there are countries for these kinds of people and those, so there should also be countries for white people.

Adding to the absurdity of the call is the fact that the United States is a highly religious country. In fact, the Ku Klux Klan now denies that it is a hate group. They have long called themselves Christians. It is long past time to remind people that such views call for seeing all people as kin, as children of the same God. Using the Christian religion in service of hate or disunity is a gross perversion, yet as I have argued, even in the most religious state in the U.S., Mississippians are recalcitrant even when religious leaders call for progress and unity.

We need to take the aim of unity seriously. We need to stop using demonizing language lightly and foolishly. We also need more people to see the effects of such crazy polarization and disunity, which have led even to campaigns for the Presidency from white supremacists. We don’t need delusions of genocide, when there are disturbing and tragic examples of the real thing.

To close, I thought about sharing with you a photo of a mountain of dead, skeleton-thin bodies. Instead, I’ll leave you with a photo I snapped at the Jewish memorial at Dachau, which was immensely beautiful and moving for me.

A photo I took from inside the Jewish memorial at the Dachau concentration camp.

Florida CUFA October Conference Call for Proposals!

Good morning, friends in Civics and Social Studies. Dr. Scott Waring, who leads the new College and University Faculty Assembly branch of the Florida Council for the Social Studies, has asked me to share a call for proposals for the upcoming October conference. Please take the time to review the call, and if you are interested, you can click at the end of this sentence to download the FL-CUFA_Proposal_15. All proposals should be sent directly to Dr. Waring at swaring@ucf.edu. I encourage you to consider joining us in October!

Presentation Formats

Paper Presentations (50 minutes)

An individual paper presentation gives authors an opportunity to present abbreviated versions of their empirical or theoretical/conceptual scholarship. After the papers are presented, a discussant will offer commentary on key revelations, vexations, and themes raised by the papers, and a chairperson will moderate questions and responses by audience members. For the sake of effective presentation and discussion, individual papers should be limited to 3,000 words, excluding references. The typical structure for a session with two papers includes a brief introduction by the chairperson, 15 minutes for each author’s presentation, 10 minutes for the discussant’s commentary, and 10 minutes of audience participation.

Symposium Sessions (50 minutes)

A symposium offers presenters, discussants, and audience members the opportunity to explore a particular problem or theme from various perspectives. Organizers of symposium sessions typically establish the topic, identify and solicit participation from appropriate scholars, and assemble and submit a single proposal representing the collective work of participants. Symposium proposals should include no more than four participants. The organizer must obtain permission and input from each individual represented in a symposium proposal. Symposium proposals must specify a discussant for the session. All presenters in a symposium should submit to the discussant a paper or commentary addressing the central theme or questions under consideration; symposium papers should be limited to 3,000 words. The chair, presenters, and discussant will determine how time is to be allocated during symposiums.

Contemporary Issues Dialogue (50 minutes)

The contemporary issues dialogue format offers conference attendees an opportunity to explore contemporary issues or dilemmas in social education via a unique forum not represented by paper sessions and symposiums. Contemporary issues dialogues can include informal discussions, town hall meetings, roundtables, papers-in-progress, structured poster sessions, research planning and methodological activities, video presentations and performances, and book talks. Sessions that promote active participation and open dialogue among audience members are strongly encouraged. Proposal authors will determine how time is to be allocated during contemporary issues dialogues.

Research-Into-Practice Sessions (50 minutes)

Research-into-practice sessions offer FL-CUFA members the opportunity to discuss and demonstrate the implications of research for educational practice. Given their association with the regular FCSS Conference program, audience members typically are classroom teachers, teacher educators, supervisors, and school administrators. With that audience in mind, presentations should feature scholarly, yet accessible, discussions and activities of interest to practicing educators. Proposal authors will determine how time is to be allocated during research into practice sessions.

Submission Guidelines

Presenters must provide, in an email to the Program Chair, Scott Waring (swaring@ucf.edu), the following:

  1. The names of all presenters and corresponding affiliations
  2. Lead presenter’s mailing address, email, and phone number
  3. A PDF or Microsoft Word compatible document, as described below, that includes a narrative of 3,000 words or fewer, excluding title, abstract, and references.

Because proposals will be reviewed in a blind peer review process, please do not include the names or affiliations of authors and presenters in the proposal document and ensure that no identifying information is embedded in the proposal document as metadata.

The Program Chair reserves the right to reject without review any proposal that exceeds the 3,000-word limit. The Program Chair reserves the right to disqualify submissions in which authors’ identifying information is revealed.

The submission deadline is Monday, August 31, 2015 11:59 p.m. No submissions will be accepted after that date and time.

Individual Paper and Symposium Proposal Contents

Each proposal should include the following elements: a) the title; b) an abstract of 35 words or less; c) the purposes and/or objectives of the study; d) the theoretical framework or perspective; e) research design and/or methods of inquiry; f) findings or arguments and their warrants; g) the importance of the work’s contribution to scholarship; and h) references. To preserve the integrity of the blind peer review process, please do not include the names or affiliations of authors and presenters in the proposal document. The Program Chair reserves the right to disqualify submissions in which authors’ identifying information is revealed. The review criteria will incorporate the clarity, organization, and perceived scholarly significance of elements c) through g) above.

Contemporary Issues Dialogue and Research Into Practice (RIP) Proposal Contents

Contemporary Issues Dialogue and RIP session proposals should include the following elements, as appropriate: a) the title of ten words or less; b) an abstract of 35 words or less; c) the purposes and objectives of the session; d) theory and research in which the session is grounded; e) methods of presentation or modes of activity for the session; f) findings or arguments and their warrants; and g) references.

To preserve the integrity of the blind peer review process, please do not include the names or affiliations of authors and presenters in the proposal document. The Program Chair reserves the right to disqualify submissions in which authors’ identifying information is revealed. The review criteria will incorporate the clarity, organization, and perceived significance of elements c) through f) above.

Participation Requirements

It is expected that all authors or presenters represented in a proposal will register for the FCSS Annual Meeting and attend and participate in conference sessions. If an emergency or other unforeseen circumstance precludes a participant from attending, she or he should immediately contact the Program Chair, Scott Waring, at swaring@ucf.edu. To promote diversity among perspectives and participants, no presenter shall appear as author or co-author on more than two proposals, or as chair or discussant on more than two proposals.