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The Democratic Divide in a Post World War II America | Featuring Dr. Carol Anderson

How to Fix Democracy

Release Date: 02/02/2024

Hélène Landemore | Who Owns Democracy? Citizens vs. Elites show art Hélène Landemore | Who Owns Democracy? Citizens vs. Elites

How to Fix Democracy

As trust in political institutions fades, who really holds power in democracy? Helene Landemore argues that elite decision-making has left democracies less responsive and less resilient. In this episode she joins Andrew Keen to explore how citizen assemblies, broader participation, and new approaches to governance could reshape the future of democratic life.

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Maury Giles: Courageous Citizenship — Practicing Resilience in an Age of Outrage show art Maury Giles: Courageous Citizenship — Practicing Resilience in an Age of Outrage

How to Fix Democracy

As How to Fix Democracy opens its seventh season on democratic  resilience, host Andrew Keen welcomes Maury Giles, the new CEO of Braver Angels, for a candid conversation about whether American democracy can withstand what Giles calls the "industrial outrage complex." In a year marking the nation's 250th anniversary, Giles argues that resilience is not something institutions deliver from above, but something citizens practice from below.  Drawing on his experience leading one of the country's largest cross-partisan civic movements -and on the lived reality of raising a political...

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Richard Edelman | From Polarization to Insularity: Can Trust be Rebuild show art Richard Edelman | From Polarization to Insularity: Can Trust be Rebuild

How to Fix Democracy

For 26 years, Richard Edelman has measured the world's trust levels through the Edelman Trust Barometer. In this final episode of our trust series, he joins Andrew Keen to diagnose a new and troubling phase: insularity. After years of polarization, grievance, and activism, societies are hardening into self-contained camps, "turtles in shells", as Edelman puts it, trusting only those who share their values, media and worldview. Governments are faltering, media credibility is shrinking, and a widening mass class divide is fueling pessimism about the future. Yet amid AI disruption, nationalism,...

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Rebuilding Trust: Can We Fix America’s Social and Political Fractures? | Featuring Dr. Michael Neblo and Frederick J. Riley show art Rebuilding Trust: Can We Fix America’s Social and Political Fractures? | Featuring Dr. Michael Neblo and Frederick J. Riley

How to Fix Democracy

In this episode of How to Fix Democracy, host Andrew Keen explores America's deepening crisis of trust, both social and political. Joined by Frederick Riley of Weave at the Aspen Institute and Dr, Michael Neblo of the Ohio State University, the conversation examines rising isolation, collapsing confidence in institutions, and the growing divide across communities. From neighborhood-level connection to large-scale democratic reform, they discuss practical, evidence-based ways to restore trust, and why small, everyday actions may be the key to saving democracy.

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Cynthia Miller - Idriss | How Distrust Fuels Extremism show art Cynthia Miller - Idriss | How Distrust Fuels Extremism

How to Fix Democracy

In this episode of How to Fix Democracy, host Andrew Keen sits down with Cynthia Miller-Idriss - scholar of extremism, founder of the Polarization and Extremism Research and Innovation Lab (PERIL), and author of Man Up: The New Misogyny and the Rise of Violent Extremism. Together they explore one of democracy's most fragile foundations: trust. From gender polarization and the rise of the "manosphere", to the declining institutional confidence, to why young men are increasingly vulnerable to online radicalization, Miller-Idriss explains how mistrust is reshaping politics, culture, and everyday...

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From FDR to AI: Derek Leebaert on Trust and Democracy show art From FDR to AI: Derek Leebaert on Trust and Democracy

How to Fix Democracy

In this episode of How to Fix Democracy, host Andrew Keen speaks with Derek Leebaert - historian, technologist and author of Unlikely Heroes - about the shifting foundations of trust in democracy. From Franklin D. Roosevelt's efforts to rebuild confidence in government during the New Deal era to today's rapid rise of articifical intelligence, Leebaert traces how accelerating technological change has shortened the lifespan in trust in institutions, leaders, and even truth itself. As AI transforms knowledge, work and power, is it a threat to democracy or a chance to renew it? Leebaert explores...

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Burt Neuborne | Law, Trust, and the American Constitution show art Burt Neuborne | Law, Trust, and the American Constitution

How to Fix Democracy

Can democracy survive without trust in the law? In this episode of How to Fix Democracy, host Andrew Keen speaks with Burt Neuborne, founding legal director of the Brennan Center for Justice and professor of law at NYU, about the complex relationship between law and trust in America. From Hobbes and Rousseau to Madison, Lincoln, and the U.S. Constitution itself, Neuborne explores how law can both deter or worst instincts and inspire our better angels.

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Richard Kreitner | Trust, Mistrust, and the Myth of American Unity show art Richard Kreitner | Trust, Mistrust, and the Myth of American Unity

How to Fix Democracy

Is mistrust a defining feature and flaw in American democracy? Or is it a manifestation of basic opposition against long-term democratic and aspirational concepts such as "all men are created equally"? In this thought provoking conversation author and historian Richard Kreitner joins Andrew Keen to explore the deep mistrust in U.S. political life. Drawing on themes from his book Break it up: Secession, Division, and the Secret History of America's Imperfect Union. Kreitner traces the fractured origins of the American project, argues that national cohesion may be neither possible nor desirable...

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Joan Williams | Outclassed: Rebuilding Trust Between Political Elites and the Working Class show art Joan Williams | Outclassed: Rebuilding Trust Between Political Elites and the Working Class

How to Fix Democracy

Legal scholar and author Joan Williams joins How to Fix Democracy to unpack the breakdown of trust between political elites and the American working class. Drawing from her new book Outclassed, Williams explores how class-blindness, cultural signaling, and economic inequality have shaped political divides - and what the left must do to win back working class voters. From language to long-term coalition-building, this episode offers a sobering but essential roadmap for restoring trust. 

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Jonathan Rauch | High Tech and Low Trust - An American Quandary show art Jonathan Rauch | High Tech and Low Trust - An American Quandary

How to Fix Democracy

In this episode Brookings's scholar Jonathan Rauch explores America's historically unprecedented position as a "high-tech, low trust society" - a dangerous combination where technological advancement coexists with collapsing social trust. Trust levels have plummeted since the 1970s warns Rauch, with America now ranking 52nd globally in believing strangers would return a lost wallet. He traces this decline to systematic attacks on institutions from both left and right, fomented by libertarian populists. He warns that without rebuilding trust - which is seven times more important in determining...

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More Episodes

The democratic divide in post WWII: advance abroad, retreat at home.  In this episode, Andrew Keen speaks with Dr. Carol Anderson, professor of African American Studies at Emory University. They discuss America in the post World War II years when America emerged as the world's leading democratic country. That claim was belied by the reality of a flawed and unfulfilled democracy at home. Black Americans, who joined the military in great numbers and fought with great distinction, returned to Jim Crow America and discrimination in many parts of the country. It continued practices of oppression and blocked the expansion of global post-war Human Rights doctrines from applying to the United States.