Hello! We wanted subscribers to the Open Space list to know that National Issues Forums is celebrating 25 years of convening forums to help put people's voices back into politics. We would like to invite you to take this opportunity to become part of the National Issues Forums network, and to utilize our newest issue book on "Democracy's Challenge: Reclaiming the Public's Role."
As you know, many Americans are turning away from public life, becoming spectators rather than participants in our democracy. People are frustrated with politics and the seemingly insurmountable partisan divide. We know that proponents of Open Space are committed, as we are, to changing this trend. This year the National Issues Forums Institute is offering an issue book that directly addresses the reasons we are all involved in this work. "Democracy's Challenge: Reclaiming the Public's Role" tackles head-on the obstacles and issues people face in a democracy that appears to have nudged its citizens onto the sidelines. Democracy's Challenge forums encourage citizens to think about what they can do to strengthen the relationship that a democracy demands between the government and its people. The issue book presents three perspectives on the problem, each of which suggests a somewhat different course of action. Right now you are invited to take advantage of a limited time offer for free materials to use for convening a Democracy's Challenge forum. The free materials in each set include 1 copy of the full-length Democracy's Challenge issue discussion guide, 30 copies of the 8-page issue discussion-guide-in-brief, 1 copy of the moderator's guide, and 1 video. If you think you want to get involved in NIF or in the Democracy's Challenge issue, or you'd like to help us get the word out about this opportunity, we encourage you to: - Order your free set of Democracy's Challenge materials by calling 1-800-600-4060, or go to www.nifi.org/discussion_guides/index.aspx to download the moderator's guide or issue brief. - Connect with the NIF network contacts nearest you. These network hubs, listed at www.nifi.org/network/index.aspx, provide trainings and workshops, organize forums, and connect NIF folks in their region. - Sign up to receive NIF e-newsletters and stay informed about network activities. Email Patty Dineen at dine...@msn.com with your name, email address, and mailing address (or just city and state) and ask her to add you to the NIF News email list. - Go to www.nifi.org/calendar/index.aspx to look up moderator trainings in your area. - Download "For Convenors and Moderators: Organizing for Public Deliberation and Moderating a Forum" at www.nifi.org/forums/detail.aspx?catID=4&itemID=230 - Tell others about this issue, and share this invitation to join the NIF network. Below is more information about the Democracy's Challenge issue and National Issues Forums. We hope to hear from you soon! - The National Issues Forums Institute Board William Winter, Chairman David Mathews, President Estus Smith, Vice President Joel Diemond David Dillon William DiMascio Patricia Dineen Jesus Garcia Sandy Heierbacher Sandra Hodge Les Ihara Ray Minor William Muse Sondra Myers William Raspberry Michelle Scott Sue Tate -- What are National Issues Forums? National Issues Forums (NIF) is a nonpartisan, nationwide network of locally sponsored public forums for the consideration of public policy issues. It is rooted in the simple notion that people need to come together to reason and talk - to deliberate about common problems. Indeed, democracy requires an ongoing deliberative public dialogue. These forums, organized by a variety of organizations, groups, and individuals, offer citizens the opportunity to join together to deliberate, to make choices with others about ways to approach difficult issues and to work toward creating reasoned public judgment. Forums range from small or large group gatherings similar to town hall meetings, to study circles held in public places or in people's homes on an ongoing basis. The National Issues Forums Institute works closely with the Kettering Foundation, an operating foundation rooted in the American tradition of inventive research. Established in 1927, the central question behind the foundation's current research is this: What does it take to make democracy work as it should? Forums focus on an issue such as health care, immigration, Social Security, or ethnic and racial tensions. The forums provide a way for people of diverse views and experiences to seek a shared understanding of the problem and to search for common ground for action. Forums are led by trained, neutral moderators, and use an issue discussion guide that frames the issue by presenting the overall problem and then three or four broad approaches to the problem. Forum participants work through the issue by considering each approach; examining what appeals to them or concerns them, and also what the costs, consequences, and trade offs may be that would be incurred in following that approach. More information about NIF can be found at www.nifi.org. -- Democracy's Challenge: Reclaiming the Public's Role While most Americans are still proud of living in a country that is governed by and for the people, many of them are no longer sure that Abraham Lincoln's vision of a democracy has withstood the test of time. They have become increasingly disaffected with a process that appears to have nudged its citizens onto the sidelines and increasingly disillusioned with politicians who appear disinterested in what they have to say. Too many Americans today have retreated from the public places, meetings, and associations at which they traditionally met to say what they thought and do what needed to be done to improve their communities and their nation. They have, so to speak, opted out. Politics is no longer working for them, they say. We have all read proposals for reforming the ways that government and politics operate. Most of them depend on government initiatives. This book is about what citizens can do. It suggests that citizens themselves can and should provide the motivating power that will rekindle the vibrant relationship that a democracy demands between the government and its people. While there is no widespread agreement on how this can be done, Democracy's Challenge provides a framework for a discussion of the possibilities. It presents three perspectives on the problem, each of which suggests a somewhat different course of action: Democratic Values: Rebuilding democracy's moral foundation As a nation, we have become self-indulgent and self absorbed, inclined to accept neither hard choices nor sacrifice. The emphasis on individual rights and personal freedom has undermined democracy. In recent decades, the moral curriculum has been neglected; this is a key element in our public troubles. Web of Connections: Reinventing citizenship Democracy requires the ability to work together on common concerns- civic skills that most people learn in clubs, church groups, and local associations. The public square is emptying because many Americans aren't making the civic connections that form the habits and sharpen the skills of citizenship. By the People: Bringing the public back into politics Government is no longer "of, by and for the people." Governance is something politicians do, not something that involves us. In a democratic nation where the people are supposed to be sovereign, citizens have lost control of the government. The political system has to be fixed so citizens once again have a central place in it. * * ========================================================== osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu ------------------------------ To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu: http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html To learn about OpenSpaceEmailLists and OSLIST FAQs: http://www.openspaceworld.org/oslist