 |
 |
 |
BETTER
TOGETHER:
Restoring the American Community
by
Robert D. Putnam and Lewis
M. Feldstein
with Don Cohen
(Simon & Schuster; September 10, 2003)
In his national best-seller Bowling
Alone, Robert Putnam decried
the collapse of America’s social institutions. But while
traveling to promote the book, one question came up at every
appearance: what can we do to end the atrophy of America’s
civic vitality. What can bring us together again?
Seeking an answer to this question, Putnam, a professor of public
policy at Harvard, with the assistance of coauthor Lewis
Feldstein,
who has a long and distinguished career in civic activism, visited
places across the country where individuals and groups are engaged
in unusual forms of social activism and civic renewal. These
are people who are renewing their communities and investing in
new forms of “social capital.” Better Together describes
a dozen innovative organizations from east to west and north
to south that are re-weaving the social fabric of our country,
and brings the hopeful news that our civic institutions are taking
new forms to adapt to new times and new needs. Examples:
* A mentoring and reading program in Philadelphia that brings
together retirees and elementary school children to the benefit
of both – the children get help reading and the retirees
have a richer, more purposeful life
* A group of sixth-grade activists in a small Wisconsin town
who managed to persuade local authorities to improve safety at
a railroad crossing and in doing so learned a valuable lesson
in civic activism
* A neighborhood in Boston that has been revitalized by a civic
association that overcame ethnic differences and now plays an
ongoing role in the neighborhood
* A community effort in the impoverished Rio Grande Valley, one
of the poorest regions in the U.S., that brought such basic services
as electricity, roads, and health care to the mostly Spanish-speaking
residents
* A successful small business initiative in Tupelo, Mississippi,
that began sixty years ago with the purchase of a prize bull
* Chicago public libraries that have broadened their mission
and have become true community centers
* Two huge and rapidly growing churches in Los Angeles that are
making people feel connected to other church members and their
community
* The city of Portland, Oregon, where the anti-war movement of
the sixties actually changed the institutions so that now there
is a remarkably high level of civic engagement in government
and politics (more so than in other cities, even other cities
on the west coast). All across America such organizations are starting up and thriving,
giving hope that the message of Bowling Alone has reached people
and that our civic institutions are improving and adapting
to the changing world around us. And the timing of Better Together
could not
be more perfect -- in the wake of 9/11 the subjects of civic
spirit, community renewal, and social capital have been high
on everyone’s agenda as Americans ask again what makes
us uniquely American and what values do we want to pass on
to the next generations.
|
 |
|