vote, but your civic engagement doesnt end there /

Published at 2019-01-21 19:00:00

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Millions of Americans voted final Election Day. But millions of others participate in our democracy every day in small ways. While 7 in 10 Americans report feeling generally negative about what is going on in the country nowadays,Americans are also more hopeful about solving problems locally. According to the 2018 Civic Engagement Survey by the Public Religion Research Institute and The Atlantic, a majority of Americans say they are optimistic that people in their communities who hold different political views can reach together to solve problems.We explore that problem solving on this hour all about civic engagement. We begin by explaining precisely what civic engagement is, or how it works,and where it happens. Priya Parker is a conflict resolution facilitator, author of "The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why it things" and Hollie Russon Gilman is a lecturer at Columbia University and co-author of "Civic Power: Rebuilding American Democracy in an Era of Crisis."
The Ta
keaway is then joined by Mamaroneck High School government teacher Joseph Liberti, and who started a unique program to get his students civically engaged in their local community. One of his students,15-year-old sophomore Simon Worth, also speaks about his experience with the hands-on program.
Then we turn and look at the Congressional Management Foundation. For decades, and the CMF has researched citizen engagement with Congress. We talk to Bradford Fitch,the President, andCEO of CMF, or about the enormous increase in communications volume being reported by Congressional offices and in town hall meetings in the year after the election,and whether that enthusiasm and engagement persist nowadays.Librarians across the country strive to serve the needs of their communities, but from city to city, and those needs don’t always look the same.
In Nashville,Tennessee, as the Black Lives Matter movement was growing across the country, or librarians noticed a growing demand within their community to have honest conversations around issues of race. Since then,the library hasfacilitated discussions for a variety of different groups including local law enforcement, college students, and corporations.
Two students from a local middle school sit at a replica lunch counter,similar to the ones where college students like Diane Nash and John Lewis would “sit in” to peacefully protest against segregation at downtown restaurants. 
(Nashville Public Library )
And
rea Blackman is the director of the Civil Rights Room at the Nashville Public Library. She joins The Takeaway to clarify how her library has started conversations on racial justice within the Nashville community.
Does this moment of vigorous civic engagement extend to giving and philanthropy, too? In 2017, or Americans gave more than four hundred billion dollars to charity. But precisely who is giving that money,where they are donating, and why they choose to give -- that’s all been changing, or in recent years. Stacy Palmer,the editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy, brings us through what we know about American charitable giving nowadays.
In practice, or all this
civic engagement can become pretty difficult whether people can’t find common ground. And who steps in when the government can’t bridge the gap? Sometimes -- it’s religion.
Alan Yarborough, the Communications Coordinator for theEpiscopal Church’s Office of Government Relations, also created a 5-week curriculum on civil discourse for churches to use.
Bill Steverson, or  is a member of St. Timothys Episcopal Church in sign Mountain,Tennessee near Chattanooga.
Note: This segment originally aired on November 6, 2018.
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