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Transcript - Civil Society and the Future of Conservatism

November 27, 2012
by Bradley Center

Download PDF (206.7 KB)

Civil Society and the Future


of Conservatism





Tuesday, November 27 - 12:00 to 2:00 p.m.
Hudson Institute - Betsy and Walter Stern Conference Center
1015 15th Street, NW - Suite 600
Washington, DC 20005


Click here to read a transcript of the event

Event Description

National Affairs magazine editor Yuval Levin, writing in the October 8, 2012 issue of The Weekly Standard, noted that this year’s presidential election seemed to have deteriorated into a contest between a “simple-minded and selfish radical individualism,” on the one hand, and “a simple-minded and dangerous radical collectivism” on the other. However Levin insisted that:

 

"To see our fundamental political divisions as a tug of war between the government and the individual is to accept the progressive premise that individuals and the state are all there is to society. The premise of conservatism has always been, on the contrary, that what matters most about society happens in the space between those two, and that creating, sustaining, and protecting that space is a prime purpose of government. The real debate forced upon us by the Obama years — the underlying disagreement to which the two parties are drawn despite themselves — is in fact about the nature of that intermediate space, and of the mediating institutions that occupy it: the family, civil society, and the private economy."

 

Other than in remarks by Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan in Cleveland, however, the role of civil society as a source of solutions to our national problems made almost no appearance in the contest’s discussions.

 

Are conservatives overlooking a critical element of their own intellectual heritage by ignoring civil society? Could a rediscovery of civic engagement play a central role in conservatism’s revival? How important is civil society likely to be as we enter a new period of severely constrained government spending?

 

These and other questions will be addressed on Tuesday, November 27th by our distinguished panelists. Speakers will include Yuval Levin, Editor of National Affairs; Robert Woodson from the Center for Neighborhood Enterprise; President of the Jack Kemp Foundation Jimmy Kemp; and Director at Augsburg College's Center for Democracy and Citizenship Harry Boyte. Hudson Institute Senior Fellow William Schambra will moderate the discussion.

 

Required Reading

Harry Boyte, "We Built What? The Vanishing Commonwealth," The Huffington Post, August 29, 2012.

Harry Boyte, "The Work of Citizenship," The Huffington Post, September 9, 2012.

Yuval Levin, "The Hollow Republic," National Review, August 13, 2012.

Yuval Levin, "The Real Debate," The Weekly Standard, October 8, 2012.

Program and Panel

11:30 a.m.
Registration, lunch buffet

12:00 p.m.
Introduction by Bradley Center Director William Schambra

12:10 p.m.
Panel discussion
Harry Boyte, Director of the Center for Democracy and Citizenship at Augsburg College
Jimmy Kemp, President of the Jack Kemp Foundation
Yuval Levin, Founding Editor of National Affairs
Robert Woodson, Founder and President of the Center for Neighborhood Enterprise

1:10
Question-and-answer session

2:00
Adjournment





Hudson Institute's Bradley Center for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal aims to explore the usually unexamined intellectual assumptions underlying the grantmaking practices of America’s foundations and provide practical advice and guidance to grantmakers who seek to support smaller, grassroots institutions in the name of civic renewal.

Tags - Click a tag for related material

Civil Society, Foundations, Nonprofits, Philanthropy

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