1
Peter Levine
Lincoln Filene Professor of Citizenship and Public Service and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, Tufts University
202B Lincoln Filene Hall, Tufts University, Medford, MA 020155
[email protected]; 617-627 2302
Education Oxford University, Balliol College: doctorate in philosophy (1992)
Yale University: B.A. in philosophy (1989)
Awards and Honors
Rhodes Scholarship (1988) Marshall Scholarship (1988, declined) Alpheus Henry Snow Prize, for the “senior who, through the combination of
intellectual achievement, character, and personality, shall be adjudged by the faculty to have done the most for Yale” (1989)
Summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, distinction in the major (1989) Jacob Cooper Prize for the best essay in ancient philosophy by a Yale graduate or
undergraduate student (1986; again in 1988) Andrew White Prize in European History at Yale (1987) E. Francis Riggs Prize at Yale “for demonstrating the best knowledge of general
culture” (1986)
Positions
Tufts University:
Academic Dean, Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship & Public Service (2018-present): responsible for the academic mission of Tisch College, the undergraduate Major in Civic Studies, and various research projects involving the College.
Lincoln Filene Professor of Citizenship & Public Affairs (2012-present). Research professor, Department of Philosophy (2012-present) Research professor, Department of Political Science (2017-present) Research professor, Tufts Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (2017-
present) Associate Dean for Research, Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship & Public
Service (2014- 2018). Director of CIRCLE (2008-2015)
2
University of Maryland: Deputy Director of CIRCLE (2001-2005), Director of CIRCLE (2006-2008), Research Scholar, Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy (1993-2008). I was also an affiliate faculty member of the Philosophy Department and a member of the University’s Committee on Philosophy, Politics, and Public Policy.
National Commission on Civic Renewal: Deputy Director (half-time role in 1997 and 1998). The Commission was chaired by Hon. William Bennett and Senator SamNunn, and funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Common Cause: Research Associate and registered federal lobbyist (1991-1993)
Harold Rosenthal Fellow in International Relations, placed at USAID, summer 1989
Organizational Leadership
Fiduciary boards
Paul J. Aicher Foundation, whose primary project is the organization Everyday Democracy, Director (2009-present)
AmericaSPEAKS, Director (2006-13) Discovering Justice (2013-present) Charles F. Kettering Foundation, Trustee (2004-present; program committee chair
2012-14) Newspaper Association of America Foundation, Trustee (2007- 2009) Street Law, Inc., Director and Program Committee Chair (2004-present)
Steering committees
Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, executive committee (2003-present; chair 2003-6)
Deliberative Democracy Consortium, co-founder and executive committee (2002-present)
National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) Civics Standing Committee (2008-2013; 2014-present) and NAEP Background Variables Committee (2008-2010)
Council of Chief State School Officers committee drafting voluntary Common Core State Standards for the Social Studies; Chair of the Civics Committee (2011-12)
National Alliance for Civic Education (NACE); co-founder (2000-2008)
Other advisory boards: America’s Promise Research Council; Mobilize.org Advisory Board; American Bar Association Standing Committee on Public Education Advisory Commission (2005-9); eJournal of Public Affairs (since 2011); MTV’s Democracy Class (since 2010); Maryland Task Force on Civic Literacy (gubernatorial appointment, 2006-9); Generation Citizen; Fair Vote Research Advisory Committee; iCivics (since 2014); The Democracy Imperative (University of New Hampshire); National Advisory Board for Public Service at Harvard College (since 2014); Obama Campaign Education Policy
3
Committee (March 2007-November 2008) and Urban Policy Committee (May 2008-November 2008); Cambridge University’s Forum for Youth Participation & Democracy International Advisory Group (2011-14); Center for Engaged Democracy, Merrimack College (since 2012); Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement Action Network Steering Committee (since 2012); Council of the American Commonwealth Partnership (since 2012); Youth Service America Academic Council (since 2012); California Civic Engagement Project (since 2012); Campus Election Engagement Project (since 2013); Millennial Action Project (since 2013); CivicLEADS (since 2015).
Student leadership: Yale College Council (undergraduate student government): vice president (1986-7) and president (1987-8). Focused on issues of community service and civic engagement, participating in some of the national discussions that led to the Points of Light initiative and then AmeriCorps, and working with others to begin a paid summer service program for Yale undergraduates.
Books
As sole author
1. What Should We Do? Political Theory with Citizens at the Center, manuscript under review
2. We are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For: The Promise of Civic Renewal in America, Oxford University Press (2013).
3. Reforming the Humanities: Literature and Ethics from Dante through Modern Times (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009)
4. The Future of Democracy: Developing the Next Generation of American Citizens (Tufts University Press, 2007). Chinese translation authorized.
5. The New Progressive Era: Toward a Fair and Deliberative Democracy (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000)
6. Living Without Philosophy: On Narrative, Rhetoric, and Morality (Albany: SUNY Press, 1998)
7. Something to Hide, a novel (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996) 8. Nietzsche and the Modern Crisis of the Humanities (Albany: SUNY Press, 1995)
Edited works
1. Special Issue of The Good Society (the journal of Civic Studies) on Reintegrating Facts, Values, and Strategies, vol. 26, no. 2-3 (in press)
2. Peter Levine and Karol Edward Soltan, eds., Civic Studies: Approaches to the Emerging Field (American Association of Colleges & Universities, 2014)
3. James Youniss and Peter Levine, eds., Engaging Young People in Civic Life (Vanderbilt University Press, 2009)
4. John Gastil and Peter Levine, eds., The Deliberative Democracy Handbook: Strategies for Effective Civic Engagement in the Twenty-First Century (Jossey-Bass, 2005). Mandarin translation, Taiwan, 2012; Japanese translation, 2013; Korean translation, 2019
4
Special project
The Anachronist, a 75,000-word work of interactive fiction, published in The Florida Review, July, 2018.
Peer-reviewed scholarly articles
1. (with David Williamson Shaffer, Gideon Dishon, Brendan Eagan, Sara Tabatabai, and Zachary Swiecki), “Dialogic Analysis: Using Epistemic Network Analysis to Model Dialogic Interactions,” American Educational Research Association symposium paper, April 6, 2018 (non-presenting author).
2. “Deliberation as an Epistemic Network: A Method for Analyzing Discussions,” under review.
3. “Habermas with a Whiff of Tear Gas: Nonviolent Campaigns and Deliberation in an Era of Authoritarianism,” Journal of Public Deliberation, vol. 14, issue 2 (2018), article 4.
4. “Introduction: On Reintegrating Facts, Values, Strategies,” The Good Society, vol. 26, no. 2-3
5. Deliberation or Simulated Deliberation?. Democracy and Education, 26 (1), 2018, Article 7.
6. Jonathan Garlick & Peter Levine, “Where Civic Meets Science: Building Science for the Public Good Through Civic Science,” Oral Diseases, vol. 23, issue 6 (Sept 2017) pp. 685–812. Winner of the Prof. Crispian Scully Best Paper Award for 2017.
7. “Media Literacy for the 21st Century. A Response to ‘The Need for Media Education in Democratic Education,’” Democracy and Education, vol. 23, no. 1, Article 15 (2015)
8. “Talking about this Generation: the Millennials and Politics,” Extensions, Summer 2015, pp. 4-9
9. Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg & Peter Levine, “Diversity in Classrooms: The Relationship between Deliberative and Associative Opportunities in School and Later Electoral Engagement,” Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, vol. 14, no. 1 (2014), pp. 294-414
10. “A Defense of Higher Education and Its Civic Mission,” Journal of General Educationvol. 63, no. 1 (2014), pp. 47-56
11. “The Case for Civic Studies,” in Peter Levine and Karol Edward Soltan, eds., Civic Studies: Approaches to the Emerging Field (American Association of Colleges & Universities, 2014), pp. 3-8
12. Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg & Peter Levine, “Policy Effects on Informed Political Engagement,” American Behavioral Scientist, vol. 58 no. 5 (May 2014), pp. 665-688
13. “The Civic Mission of Higher Education at a Time of Democratic Disconnect,” Partnerships: A Journal of Service Learning and Civic Engagement, vol. 4, no. 2 (Oct. 2013), online
14. Karol Soltan and Peter Levine, “The Summer Institute of Civic Studies: An Introduction,” The Good Society, vol. 22, Number 2, 2013
15. “Review Symposium: Race in America. A Discussion of Cathy J. Cohen’s Democracy Remixed: Black Youth and the Future of American Politics,” Perspectives on Politics, vol. 10, no. 3, September 2012, pp. 757-760
5
16. Kerry Poole, Michael Berson & Peter Levine, “On Becoming a Legislative Aide: Enhancing Civic Engagement through a Digital Simulation,” Action in Teacher Education, vol. 32, no 4 (2011), pp. 70-82
17. “Seeing like a Citizen: The Contributions of Elinor Ostrom to ‘Civic Studies,’” The Good Society, vol. 20, no. 1 (2011), pp. 3-14
18. Jonathan Cohen, Terry Pickeral & Peter Levine, “The Foundation for Democracy: Promoting Social, Emotional, Ethical,Cognitive Skills and Dispositions in K-12 Schools,” Revista Interamerica de Educación para la Democracia, vol. 3, no. 1 (April 2010), pp. 74-94
19. Constance Flanagan & Peter Levine, “Youth Civic Engagement During the Transition to Adulthood,” in Mary Waters, Gordon Berlin, and Frank Furstenberg (eds.), Transition to Adulthood, (Princeton/Brookings: The Future of Children), vol. 20, no. 1, Spring 2010, pp. 159-180.
20. Mark Hugo Lopez, Kenneth Dautrich, David Yalof & Peter Levine, “Schools, Education Policy and the Future of the First Amendment, Political Communication, vol. 26, no. 1, January-March 2009
21. Robert M. Hollister, Nancy Wilson & Peter Levine, “Educating Students to Foster Active Citizenship,” PeerReview, vol. 10, no. 2/3, spring/summer 2008/
22. “The Civic Engagement of Young Immigrants: Why Does it Matter?” Applied Developmental Science, volume 12, issue 2 (April 2008), pp. 102-104.
23. Peter Levine & Rose Marie Nierras, “Activists’ Views of Deliberation,” Journal of Public Deliberation, vol. 3, no. 1 (2007), article 4
24. Archon Fung, John Gastil, & Peter Levine, “Future Directions for Public Deliberation,” Journal of Public Deliberation: Vol. 1: No. 1, Article 3 (2005). Also appears as Chapter 19 of Gastil and Levine, eds., Handbook of Public Deliberation
25. Mark Hugo Lopez & Peter Levine, “What We Should Know about the Effectiveness of Campaigns but Don’t,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 601 (Sept. 2005), pp. 180-191
26. “The Problem of Online Misinformation and the Role of Schools,” Studies in Media & Information Literacy Education, volume 5, issue 1 (February 2005)
27. “What is the Role of Government Supported Medical Websites?” Library and Information Science Electronic Journal (LIBRES), vol. 14, issue 2, September 2004
28. “A Movement for the Commons?” The Responsive Community, vol. 13, no. 4 (Fall 2003), pp. 28-39
29. “Information Technology and the Social Construction of Information Privacy: Comment,” Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Volume 22, Issue 3, May-June 2003, pp. 281-285
30. “Building the E-Commons,” The Good Society, vol. 11, no. 3 (2003), pp. 1-9 31. Keats Against Dante: The Sonnet on Francesca da Rimini,” Keats-Shelley Journal,
vol. LI (2002), pp. 76-93 32. “The Legitimacy of Labor Unions,” The Hofstra Labor and Employment Law
Journal, vol. 18, no. 2 (Spring, 2001), pp. 529-573. A Chinese translation was authorized for Global Law Review, a quarterly law journal published by the Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
33. “Why Dante Damned Francesca da Rimini,” Philosophy & Literature, vol. 23 (October, 1999), pp. 334-350
6
34. “Nietzsche and the Greeks,” The International Journal of the Classical Tradition, Spring 1998, pp. 527-529William A. Galston & Peter Levine, “America’s Civic Condition: A Glance at the Evidence,” The Brookings Review, vol. 15, no. 4 (Fall 1997), pp. 23-26. This article is reprinted in E.J. Dionne, Jr., editor, Community Works: The Revival of Civil Society in America (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 1998), pp. 30-36
35. “Lolita and Aristotle’s Ethics,” Philosophy and Literature, volume 19, number 1 (April, 1995), pp. 32-47
Invited chapters
1. (with Tetjana Kloubert), Introduction to Florian Wenzel and Christian Boeser-Schnebel, A Manual on “Village Talk” (Stiftung Mitarbeit, 2018).
2. “The Possibilities of Policy Relative to the Purposes of Civic Education” and a response to Beth Rubin’s commentary on that chapter, in Paul G. Fitchett and Kevin W. Meuwissen, eds., Social Studies in the New Education Policy Era: Conversations on Purposes, Perspectives, and Practices (Routledge, 2018), pp. 67-71 and 78-80.
3. Peter Levine and Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, “Preparing for Civic Life.” In Rafael Heller, Rebecca E.,Wolfe & Adria Steinberg (eds)., Rethinking Readiness: Deeper Learning for College, Work, and Life (Cambridge: Harvard Education Press, 2017), pp. 59-79
4. Jodi Benenson, Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, Peter Levine, and Felicia M. Sullivan, “Youth as Part of the Solution: Youth Engagement as a Core Strategy of Comprehensive Community Initiatives,” in Jonathan F. Zaff, Elizabeth Pufall Jones, Alice E. Donlan, Sara Anderson (eds.), Comprehensive Community Initiatives for Positive Youth Development (New York: Routledge, 2016)
5. Peter Levine & Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, “State Policies for Civic Education,” in Esther Thorson, Mitchell S. McKinney, and Dhavan Shah, eds., Political Socialization in a Media-Saturated World (New York: Peter Lang, 2016), pp. 113-24.
6. “Youth Disaffection with Politics: The US Case,” in Pedro Pérez Herrero (ed.) Desaffección política y gobernabilidad: el reto politico (Madrid: Instituto Universitario de Investigación en Estudios Latinamericanos, 2015), pp. 45-60
7. “Democracy in the Digital Age,” The Civic Media Reader, edited by Eric Gordon and Paul Mihailidis (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2016), pp. 29-47.
8. “Practice and Theory in the Service of Social Change,” in Margaret Post, Elaine Ward, Nicholas Longo, and John Saltmarsh (eds.), Voices of the Next Generation of Engagement (Stylus, 2016)
9. “Jobs, Jobs, Jobs: The Economic Impact of Public Work,” in Harry C. Boyte, ed., Democracy’s Education: Public Work, Citizenship, and the Future of Colleges and Universities (Vanderbilt University Press, 2015), pp-204-210.
10. “Civic Engagement” in Emerging Trends in the Behavioral and Social Sciences, edited by Robert A. Scott and Stephen M. Kosslyn (John Wiley & Sons, 2015)
11. “Civic Renewal: Theory and Practice,” in Richard Marback (ed.) Generations: Rethinking Age and Citizenship (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2015)
12. “Education for Civil Society,” in David Campbell, Meira Levinson, and Frederick M. Hess (eds.), Civics 2.0: Citizenship Education for a New Generation (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press, 2012), pp. 37-56.
7
13. Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg & Peter Levine, “Investing In Civic Health – A Case for Strengthening Civic Infrastructure and Civic Education,” in Thomas Bryer (ed) Higher Education Beyond Job Creation: Universities, Citizenship, and Community(Lexington Books, 2014)
14. “A New Hull-House? The Monumental Challenge of Service-Learning and Community Engagement,” in Dan W. Butin and Scott Seider (eds.), The Engaged Campus: Certificates, Minors, and Majors as the New Community Engagement (New York: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2012), pp. 171-6
15. “An Ethical Turn for the Humanities,” in Rethinking the Humanities: Paths and Challenges, edited by Ricardo Gil Soeiro and Sofia Tavares (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing: 2012), pp. 129-142.
16. “Civic Studies as an Academic Discipline” in Donald W. Harwood (ed.), Civic Provocations, Bringing Theory to Practice Monograph, 2012
17. “Patriotism Can Serve Constructive Purposes in Education,” in Noel Merino, ed., Current Controversies: Patriotism (Greenhaven Press, 2011), pp. 107-13
18. Barry Checkoway, Richard Guarasci & Peter Levine, “Reuniting the ‘Often Neglected’ Aims of Liberal Education,” in Don Harward, ed., Transforming Undergraduate Education: Theory that Compels and Practices that Succeed (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield), 2011, pp. 109-24
19. “Letter to President Obama: A Policy Approach for the Federal Government,” in David Feith (ed.), Teaching America: The Case for Civic Education (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2011), pp. 209-217.
20. Nancy Thomas & Peter Levine, “Deliberative Democracy and Higher Education: Higher Education’s Democratic Mission,” in John Saltmarsh and Matthew Hartley, eds., To Serve a Larger Purpose: Engagement for Democracy and the Transformation of Higher Education (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2011)
21. Jonathan F. Zaff, Daniel Hart, Constance A. Flanagan, James Youniss & Peter Levine, “Developing Civic Engagement within a Civic Context,” The Handbook of Life-Span Development (John Wiley & Sons, 2010)
22. Elizabeth Hollander, Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, Duncan Picard, Jonathan Zaff & Peter Levine, “Assessing the Effects of Institutional Culture on Leadership Education at Tufts University,” in Nicholas V. Longo and Cynthia M. Gibson, eds., From Command to Community: A New Approach to Leadership Education in Colleges and Universities(University Press of New England, 2011), pp. 169-87.
23. “Social Accountability as Public Work,” in Sina Odugbemi and Taeku Lee, eds, Accountability through Public Opinion: From Inertia to Public Action (Washington, DC: The World Bank, 2011), pp. 291-306
24. “Service-Learning Research: Returning to the Moral Questions,” in Trae Stewart and Nicole Webster (eds.), Problematizing Service-Learning, Information Age Publishing, 2010, pp. 343-350
25. Nancy Thomas & Peter Levine, “Deliberative Democracy and Higher Education: Higher Education’s Democratic Mission,” in John Saltmarsh and Matthew Hartley, eds., To Serve a Larger Purpose: Engagement for Democracy and the Transformation of Higher Education (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2011).
8
26. “Civic Knowledge,” in Michael Edwards, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Civil Society (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 362-374
27. Peter Levine & Ann Higgins-D’Alessandro, “Youth Civic Engagement: Normative Issues,” chapter in Handbook of Research on Civic Engagement in Youth, edited by Lonnie Sherrod, Judith Torney-Purta, and Constance A. Flanagan (John Wiley & Sons, 2010)
28. “A Public Voice for Youth: The Audience Problem in Digital Media and Civic Education,” in W. Lance Bennett (ed.), Civic Life Online: Learning How Digital Media Can Engage Youth (Cambridge, Mass. and London: MIT Press, 2007), pp. 119-138
29. “Creative Use of the New Media” in Lonnie R. Sherrod, Ron Kassimir, and Connie Flanagan (eds.), Youth Activism: An International Encyclopedia (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2005)
30. “Collective Action, Civic Engagement, and the Knowledge Commons,” in Charlotte Hess and Elinor Ostrom, eds., Understanding Knowledge as a Commons: From Theory to Practice (MIT Press, 2006). This is a revised version of “Youth-Led Research, the Internet, and Civic Engagement” (Digital Library of the Commons, 2004)
31. “The Internet and Civil Society,” in Verna V. Gehring, ed., The Internet in Public Life (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004), pp. 79-98. This is arevised and updated version of “The Internet and Civil Society,” Report from the Institute for Philosophy & Public Policy, vol. 20, no. 4, Fall 2000. This article originated as a talk on the same subject at the University of Tilburg (in the Netherlands). A long version has been published in a volume entitled Ethics and the Internet, edited by Anton Vedder (Oxford: Intersentia, 2001), pp. 177-193. In other versions it has been republished as “The Internet and Civil Society: Dangers and Opportunities” in iMP Magazine (May 2001) and by the Institute for Global Ethics’ Public Policy Program. A Hungarian translation by the Information Society Research Institute (Budapest) was authorized
32. “Campaign Web Pages and the Public Interest,” in David M. Anderson and Michael Cornfield, eds., The Civic Web: Online Politics and Democratic Values (Rowman & Littlefield, 2002).
33. “Can the Internet Rescue Democracy? Toward an On-line Commons” in Ronald Hayduk and and Kevin Mattson (eds.), Democracy’s Moment: Reforming the American: Political System for the 21st Century (Lanham, MD, Rowman & Littlefield, 2002), pp. 121-137
Articles and monographs without formal peer review
1. «Reflexiones críticas sobre el carácter predictivo de la Ciencia Política» (a blog post originally entitled “Why political science dismissed Trump and political theory predicted him,” trans. by Carolina Rusca) in Crítica y Resistencias. Revista de conflictos sociales latinoamericanos, no.6 (2018), pp.124-129.
2. “Another Time for Freedom? Lessons from the Civil Rights Era for Today’s Campuses,” Liberal Education, Winter 2019, Vol. 105, No. 1.
3. “Review of Political Translation: How Social Movement Democracies Survive by Nicole Doerr (Cambridge University Press, 2018),” Journal of Public Deliberation: Vol. 14 : Iss. 1 , Article 10.
9
4. Matthew N. Atwell, John Bridgeland, and Peter Levine, Civic Deserts: America’s Civic Health Challenge (Washington, DC, National Conference on Citizenship, 2017)
5. Peter Levine and Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, “The Republic is (Still) at Risk—and Civics is Part of the Solution” (Medford, MA: Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, Tufts University, 2017) with support from Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Hewlett and McCormick Foundations
6. “Saving Relational Politics,” Perspectives on Politics, Vol. 14, Issue 02, June 2016, pp. 468-473
7. Public-Spirited Citizenship: Leadership and Good Government in the United States” (book review), Political Science Quarterly, vol. 131, Issue 4 (Winter 2016 ), pp. 896–897
8. (with Myung J. Lee), “A New Model for Citizen Engagement,” Stanford Social Innovation Review, Fall 2016
9. “Join a club! Or a team – both can make good citizens,” Phi Delta Kappan, vol. 97, no. 8 (May 2016), pp 24-27
10. (with Abby Kiesa), “Do We Actually Want Higher Youth Voter Turnout?” Stanford Social Innovation Review, March 21, 2016
11. “The Question Each Citizen Must Ask,” Educational Leadership, March 2016, pp. 30-34.
12. Review essay: Danielle S. Allen and Rob Reich (eds.) Education, Justice & Democracy, in Theory and Research in Education, vol. 13, no. 2 (July 2015), pp. 235-238
13. Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg & Peter Levine, “Challenges and Opportunities for Discussion of Controversial Issues in Racially Pluralistic Schools,” Social Education, vol. 79, no. 5 (Oct. 2015), p. 271-7
14. Peter Levine and Eric Liu, “America’s Civic Renewal Movement: The View from Organizational Leaders” (Medford, MA: Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship & Public Service, 2015).
15. Peter Levine & Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, “Civic Education and Deeper Learning,” Students at the Center: Deeper Learning Research Series. Boston, MA: Jobs for the Future, 2014
16. Marshall Croddy & Peter Levine “The C3 Framework: A Powerful Tool for Preparing Future Generations for Informed and Engaged Civic Life,” Social Education, vol. 78, no. 6 (2014), pp 282–285
17. “Turning Students into Voters: What Teachers Can Do,” Social Education, 78(4), pp 175–178
18. “Civic Studies,” in Philosophy and Public Policy Quarterly, vol. 32, No 1 (2014). 19. “Teaching the Deeper Aspects of Civic Education,” The Standard (National
Association of State Boards of Education), March 24, 2014, pp. 37-39. 20. “Forward,” to Elizabeth Lynn, State Councils, the Humanities, and the American
Public (Dayton, OH: Kettering Foundation, 2013), pp. 1-4. 21. Meira Levinson & Peter Levine, “Taking Informed Action: The Civic Footprint to
Prepare Students for Civic Life,” Social Education, vol. 77, no. 6 (Nov. 2013), pp. 339-41
22. Peter Levine & Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, “Teaching Civics in a Time of Partisan Polarization,” Social Education, vol. 77, no 4 (2013), pp. 215-7.
10
23. “What the NAEP Civics Assessment Measures and How Students Perform,” CIRCLE Fact Sheet, 2013
24. Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, Chaeyoon Lim & Peter Levine, “Civic Health and Unemployment II: The Case Builds,” National Conference on Citizenship: Washington, DC, 2012
25. Surbhi Godsay, Whitney Henderson, Peter Levine & Josh Littenberg-Tobias, “State Civic Education Requirements,” CIRCLE Fact Sheet (2013)
26. Michelle J. Boyd, Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, Jonathan Zaff, & Peter Levine “Assessment Spotlight: Tufts University, Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service,” Bringing Theory to Practice Newsletter, fall 2012.
27. Surbhi Godsay, Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, Abby Kiesa, & Peter Levine, That’s Not Democracy”: How Out of School Youth Engage in Civic Life and What Stands in their Way, CIRCLE Monograph, 2012
28. “How to Combat Incivility: A Policy Agenda for Civic Renewal,” Dispute Resolution Magazine, vol. 18, no. 2 (2012), pp. 24-26
29. Civic Engagement and Community Information: Five Strategies to Revive Civic Communication, A White Paper on the Civic Engagement Recommendations of the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy, Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, 2011
30. “What Do We Know about Civic Engagement?” Liberal Education, vol. 97, no. 2 (Spring 2011), pp. 20-7
31. “The Public and its Problems,” National Civic Review centennial edition, vol. 100, no. 1 (April 2011), pp. 42-50
32. “Teaching and Learning Civility,” in Nancy L. Thomas (ed.), “Educating for Deliberative Democracy,” New Directions for Higher Education, no. 152 (winter 2010), pp. 11-17
33. “Reforming the Humanities: The Ethical Interpretation of Stories,” Intellectual News(the review of the International Society for Intellectual History), vol. 16 (2010), pp. 110-112
34. Peter Levine & Ann Higgins d’Alessandro, “The Philosophical Foundations of Civic Education,” Philosophy & Public Policy Quarterly, vol. 30, no. 3/4 (Summer/Fall 2010), pp. 21-7
35. John M. Bridgeland & Peter Levine, “Civic Health in Hard Times,” Spotlight on Poverty and Opportunity, September 28, 2009
36. “Making the Case: The Civic Case for Voluntary Student Groups,” Leadership for Student Activities, vol. 39, no. 9 (May 2009), pp. 16-17.
37. “The Civic Opportunity Gap,” Educational Leadership, vol. 66, no. 8 (May 2009), pp. 20-25.
38. “Civic Engagement for All: A Conversation with Peter Levine,” Northwest Education,vol. 14, no. 2 (Winter 2009), pp. 12-13
39. Peter Levine, Constance A. Flanagan and Les Gallay, The Millennial Pendulum: A New Generation of Voters and the Prospects for a Political Realignment, New America Foundation monograph, February 2009
40. Constance A. Flanagan, Peter Levine, and Richard Settersten, Civic Engagement and the Changing Transition to Adulthood, CIRCLE monograph, January 2009
11
41. Mark Hugo Lopez, Karlo Barrios Marcelo, & Peter Levine, Getting Narrower at the Base: The American Curriculum After NCLB, CIRCLE monograph, December, 2008.
42. “The Case for Service,” Philosophy & Public Policy Quarterly, vol. 28, no. 3/4 (summer/fall 2008), pp. 2-8. Also anthologized in Sylvan Barnet and Hugo Bedau, eds., Current Issues and Enduring Questions (New York, St. Martin’s Press, 2011).
43. “America’s Civic Health Index,” 2008, published by the National Conference on Citizenship in partnership with CIRCLE and the Saguaro Seminar. I was one of several authors and drafted the original text.
44. Matt Leighninger & Peter Levine, “Education in a Rapidly Changing Democracy: Strengthening Civic Education for Citizens of All Ages,” The School Administrator,October 2008
45. “The Engaged University: A Tale of Two Generations,” in David W. Brown and Deborah Witte, eds., Agent of Democracy: Higher Education and the HEX Journey (Dayton: Kettering Foundation Press, 2008), pp. 11-28.
46. “Education and the Limits of Technocracy,” Philosophy & Public Policy Quarterly, vol. 27, no. 3/4 (Summer/Fall 2007), pp. 17-21.
47. (with several others) “America’s Civic Health Index,” 2007, published by the National Conference on Citizenship in partnership with CIRCLE and the Saguaro Seminar.
48. “Learning and Democracy: Civic Education,” The Kettering Review, vol. 24, no. 3 (Fall 2006), pp. 32-42
49. (With Mark Hugo Lopez and others), “The 2006 Civic and Political Health of the Nation” (CIRCLE, based on a nationally representative survey.)
50. Broken Engagement: America’s Civic Engagement Index, A report by the National Conference on Citizenship in association with CIRCLE and the Saguaro Seminar (September 18, 2006): with 12 co-authors, but I was responsible for the data and quantitative analysis.
51. “Civic Renewal in America,” Philosophy and Public Policy Quarterly, vol. 26, no. 1/2 (winter/spring 2006), pp. 2-12
52. “The Civic Mission of Schools: Chief Findings and Next Steps,” Knowledge Quest, vol. 34, no. 4 (March/April, 2006), pp. 20-22
53. “Politics is About Relationships by Harold H. Saunders” (book review), Connections(winter 2006), pp. 26-27
54. “Youth Voting in 2004: The Myths and the Facts,” Wingspread Journal (2005), pp. 3-6
55. “Journalism and Democracy: Does it Matter How Well the Press Covers Iraq?” National Civic Review, vol. 93, no. 3 (Fall 2004), pp. 16-24.
56. (with David Brown and Robert Kingston) “What is ‘Public’ About What Academics Do? An Exchange with Robert Kingston and Peter Levine,” Higher Education Exchange, 2004 pp. 17-29
57. “Civic Education” (letter), Education Next, Spring 2004, p. 5 58. Mark Hugo Lopez & Peter Levine, “Themes Emphasized in Social Studies and Civics
Classes: New Evidence,” CIRCLE fact sheet, Feb. 2004 59. Cynthia Gibson & Peter Levine, “The Path To Consensus: Coalition-Building,
Advocacy, Research and Communications Converge for Success in Carnegie/CIRCLE Program,” Gold Book (Alliance for Nonprofit Management), February 2004
12
60. Mark Lopez & Peter Levine, “Young People and Political Campaigning on the Internet,” CIRCLE fact sheet, January 2004
61. “The Idea of an Engaged University,” an interview of me by David Brown, Higher Education Exchange, 2003
62. Mark Lopez & Peter Levine, “Youth Voter Turnout has Declined, by Any Measure,” CIRCLE publication, June 2002
63. “The Libertarian Critique of Labor Unions,” Philosophy & Public Policy Quarterly, Volume 21, Number 4 (Fall 2001)
64. “Civic Renewal and the Commons of Cyberspace,” The National Civic Review, vol. 90, no. 3 (Fall 2001), pp. 205-211
65. “Public Intellectuals and the Influence of Economics,” The Higher Education Exchange, 2001.
66. “Lessons from the Brooklyn Museum Controversy,” Report from the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, vol. 20, no. 2/3, Summer 2000
67. “Michael Edwards, Future Positive: International Co-operation in the 21st Century,” book review in the IDEA Newsletter, May 2000
68. “Getting Practical About Deliberative Democracy,” The Report from the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, Fall 1999
69. “Hopeful Signs in America’s Civic Health,” press release and talk given at the Brookings Institution, Washington, June 18, 1999
70. “The Index of National Civic Health (INCH),” a publication of the National Commission on Civic Renewal (1998).
71. “Expert Analysis vs. Public Opinion: The Case of Campaign Finance Reform,” The Report from the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, summer, 1997. This article is anthologized in Social Problems, twenty-seventh edition, edited by Kurt Finsterbusch (McGraw Hill-Dushkin, 1999). A shorter version was published as “Cleaning Up Campaigns,” The Birmingham News, “Review & Comment” section, Sunday, August 17, 1997, p. C 1
72. “Deliberation and Technical Reasoning,” a chapter in the Standing with the Public: The Humanities and Democratic Practice, edited by Noelle McAfee and Jim Veninga (Dayton, 1997)
73. “Public Journalism and Deliberation,” Report from the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, winter, 1994. This article was reprinted in Theodore Lowi, et al., Readings for American Government (Norton, 2000)
74. Five entries for the Norton Dictionary of Modern Thought, edited by Alan Bullock and Stephen Trombley, 1999 (“Will to Power,” “Eternal Return,” “ Ubermensch,” “Last Man,” and “Master Morality/Slave Morality”)
75. “Consultants and American Political Culture,” Report from the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, summer/fall issue, 1994 This article was abridged in The Congressional Quarterly Researcher (1996)
76. “Carol Gould, Rethinking Democracy,” Civic Arts Review (1989) 77. Lawrence Cremin, American Education: The Metropolitan Experience” (book
review), Civic Arts Review (Ohio Wesleyan University, 1988)
Op-Eds and Editorials
13
1. (with Moon Duchin) “Rebooting the Mathematics of Gerrymandering,” The Conversation, October 23, 2017
2. (with Talmon Joseph Smith) “A New Year’s Resolution for the Republic: Make Average Citizens’ Opinions Matter Again,” Salon, Jan 16, 2017
3. (with Abby Kiesa) “Youth and US Elections: About Way More Than Just the Horserace,” The World Financial Review, Nov./Dec. 2016, pp. 22-4.
4. (with Abby Kiesa) “Why American Urgently Needs to Improve K-12 Civic Education,” The Conversation, Oct 30, 2016
5. “Teach Civic Responsibility to High School Students,” The New York Times (“Room for Debate” feature), Oct. 17, 2016
6. “The Lack of Diversity in Philosophy is Blocking its Progress,” Aeon Magazine, June 28, 2016
7. “Explainer: What is Wrong with America’s Civic Education,” The Conversation, May 9, 2016
8. “The Waning Influence of American Political Parties,” The Conversation, March 31, 2016. Reprinted in US News & World Report and in Newsweek.
9. (with Alan Solomont), “Renewing Our Commitment to US History and Civics,” Roll Call, October 15, 2015
10. “Federal Citizenship Test: What Should a Good Citizen Really Know About America?” Fox News (online), March 18, 2015
11. “Why the Voting Age Should be 17,” Politico, Feb. 24, 2105 12. “Opposing View: Good Citizenship Transcends a Test,” USA Today, Feb. 9, 2015 13. (With Scott Warren) “To Revive Our Democracy, Revive Civic Education,” The
Hill,Jan. 15, 2015. 14. “Social Media Hasn’t Boosted Young Voter Turnout,” Washington Post political
science blog (“The Monkey Cage”), Dec. 1, 2014 15. “Commentary: If Millennials Leave Religion, Then What?” The Washington Post,
April 21, 2014 (and on the Religion New Service wire) 16. “ObamaCare and America’s Youth — Why Lessons of 2014 Will Last a Lifetime,”
FoxNews.com (op-ed), March 31, 2014 17. “What Bipartisan Budget Agreement Suggests For Future of American Democracy,”
Fox News online, Dec. 20, 2013 18. Trey Grayson and Peter Levine, “Recipe for Improving Civic Education,” The Hill,
Oct. 15, 2013 19. “Citizenship isn’t about Passing a Civics Test.” CNN.com, May 6, 2013. 20. “The Half-Impressive Youth Vote,” US News & World Report, November 30, 2012 21. “Why Young People Turned Out–Again,” The New York Daily News, Nov. 9, 2012 22. “My View: How Schools Should Handle 9/11 in Class,” CNN’s “Schools of Thought”
website, Sept. 11, 2012 23. “Why The GOP’s Future Could Depend on Romney’s Ability to Connect with Young
People,” Fox News.com, April 27, 2012 24. “Does Rick Santorum Have a Youth Problem?” Daily Caller, Feb. 27, 2012 25. “New Role for Young Voters,” Politico, Jan. 20, 2012 26. “Young, Black and Voting,” The Root, Dec. 2, 2011 27. Joseph Kahne & & Peter Levine, “Voter Turnout Spotlights Educational Need,” San
Francisco Chronicle, March 9, 2008
14
28. John M. Bridgeland & Peter Levine, “Civic Priorities,” The Washington Times, October 4, 2006
Organizer/Lead Author of Commission or Committee Reports
1. (Writer and Chair of the Civics Group), College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework for Social Studies State Standards, National Council for the Social Studies (2013): being used as the framework to revise standards in at least eight states
2. (Director and Principal Investigator) Commission on Youth Voting and Civic Knowledge, “All Together Now: Collaboration and Innovation for Youth Engagement” (Medford: MA: Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning & Engagement, 2013)
3. Civic Health and Unemployment: Can Engagement Strengthen the Economy?(Washington, DC: National Conference on Citizenship, 2011) I drafted the text, but the named authors are CIRCLE, Civic Enterprises, National Conference on Citizenship, Saguaro Seminar, and the National Constitution Center.
4. (Executive editor, with several others), Guardian of Democracy: The Civic Mission of Schools, published by the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, CIRCLE, American Bar Association Division of Public Education, Lenore Annenberg Institute for Civics, and National Conference on Citizenship (2011)
5. “Higher Education: Civic Mission & Civic Effects,” published by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and CIRCLE in February 2006. This is a consensus report by 22 scholars; I drafted it and revised it to achieve agreement
6. The Civic Mission of Schools, a report released by Carnegie Corporation of New York and CIRCLE, February 2003. This report was generated by more than 50 author/endorsers as a result of a deliberative process jointly organized and managed by Cynthia Gibson (Carnegie Corporation of New York) and me. It was the subject of a syndicated column by David Broder, several unsigned editorials, and numerous news stories. Copies were distributed at a White House Forum on History, Civics, and Service and a Congressional Conference on Civic Education, among other events. More than 30,000 copies have been requested. It is the charter for the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools
Summer Institutes for Faculty, Graduate Students, and Practitioners
2009-2019: Summer Institute of Civic Studies, annually in June or July at Tufts’ Tisch College of Civic Life, co-directed with Karol Soltan from 2009-2017.
2015-19: European Summer Institute of Civic Studies, annually in July or August in Ukraine of Germany, co-directed with Karol Soltan and Tetjana Kloubert
2019: first annual American Political Science Association Institute for Civically Engaged Research, June at Tisch College, co-directed with Amy Cabrera Rasmussen an Valeria Sinclair Chapman.
Keynote/Plenary Speeches
15
1. Keynote at the Delaware Summit on Civic Education, University of Delaware, Feb 7, 2019
2. Keynote at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay 2019 Instructional Development Institute, on“Making High-Impact Educational Experiences for All,” Green Bay, Jan. 24, 2019
3. “The Civic Mission of Schools: Lessons for Utah,” at the “A Place for All” statewide civics conference, Salt Lake City, June 26, 2018
4. Youth Civic Engagement,” keynote, national YMCA Youth & Government State Directors’ Conference, Atlanta, GA (the State House chamber), May 14, 2018
5. “The State of Civic Life,” featured speech, The Corps Network’s National Conference, Washington, DC, Feb. 13, 2018
6. “How to Respond: Civic Renewal in the Age of Trump” Indivisible Chippewa Valley Citizen Summit, Eau Claire, WI, Nov 12, 2017
7. “Elinor Ostrom and the Citizen’s Basic Question: What Should We Do?” Tocqueville Lecture, Indiana University, Oct 5, 2017
8. The 2017 William R. and Linda K. Cotter Debate at Colby College on “American Democracy?”, with Benjamin Page, Rosslyn Fuller, and Joseph R. Reisert, Colby College, March 29, 2017.
9. “From Responsiveness to Tolerance,” keynote at the Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd Program for Strategic Research & Studies conference on “Teaching Tolerance & Peace in Education: American Experiences & International Lessons,” Orlando, Florida, March 27, 2017
10. “Networks, Deliberation, and an Open Public Sphere,” keynote at Northeastern University’s NULab for Texts, Maps and Networks, conference on “Keeping the Public Sphere Open,” Boston, MA, March 24, 2017
11. “Morality and Networks,” Mississippi Philosophical Association annual meeting, Mississippi State University, Feb. 3, 2017
12. “What should young people know about the elections and why is it important?” (opening plenary), Teaching about the 2016 Elections Conference, Madison, WI, Sept. 24, 2016
13. Plenary remarks, White House Civic Workshop, The White House, July 13, 2016 14. Plenary talk, Cities of Service Annual Convening, New York City, June 6, 2016 15. Lunchtime keynote, New York State Council for the Social Studies Annual Meeting,
Albany, NY, March 31, 2016 16. “Civic Renewal in America,” Arizona State University, Tempe AZ, March 28, 2016 17. “Leadership for Civic Renewal: Reinvigorating America’s Civic Life,” the 2015 Martel
Lecture in Leadership and Public Opinion, University of Connecticut, Oct. 14, 2015 18. University of Texas San Antonio Civic Engagement Summit keynote, San Antonio,
Sept. 28, 2015 19. “The Year the People Took Back Politics: A Vision for 2016,” keynote at “Breaking
Through: Increasing Civic Participation Before, During and After Elections,” Austin, TX, July 22, 2015
20. “Civic Renewal in American Cities,” City Accelerator Local Government Engagement national meeting, Cambridge, MA March 26, 2015
21. Keynote, Vermont League of Women Voters’ annual spring luncheon, Waterbury, VT March 21, 2015
16
22. “The Promise of Civic Renewal in America,” opening keynote, The Florida Civic Advance (statewide summit), Orlando, Feb. 22, 2015
23. “Civic Education in a Time of Inequality and Polarization,” opening remarks at a Ford Foundation conference on “Educating for Democracy,” New York City, Jan. 23, 2015
24. “Civic Engagement: The Role of Faculty in Reinvigorating Democracy,” The Cooperating Colleges of Greater Springfield (MA) conference, Nov 13, 2014
25. “The Promise of Civic Renewal in America,” keynote speech at the Champaign (IL) STAR (Service Together Achieves results) Expo/Awards Program, April 17, 2014
26. “The Promise of Civic Renewal in America,” the Rotunda, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, April 9, 2014
27. “The Promise of Civic Renewal in America,” lunchtime plenary at the Center for the Study of Citizenship’s 2014 Conference, Wayne State University, Detroit, March 21, 2014
28. “The Promise of Civic Renewal in America,” opening plenary at the “Democracy in America: Participation and Social Justice” conference at Stetson University, Florida, March 28, 2014
29. “The Promise of Civic Renewal,” Texas Conference on Civic Life, Austin, TX, Nov. 9, 2013
30. Civic and Moral Education Initiative Colloquium Series/Gutman Library Distinguished Author Series Event on We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For, Harvard Graduate School of Education, Oct. 21, 2013
31. “Distinguished Voices in Civics” speaker series, inaugural talk, Morven Park, VA, Sept. 25, 2013
32. “A Defense of Higher Education and its Civic Mission,” keynote, American Democracy Project/The Democracy Commitment national conference, Denver, CO, June 7, 2013
33. Social Capital Forum: “How Can Engagement Drive Economic Growth?” Boston, MA, May 3, 2013
34. Princeton AlumniCorps plenary talk, Princeton, NJ, April 27, 2013 35. “The Civic Mission of Schools Report, a Ten-Year Retrospective,” (after-dinner
keynote), 2013 Illinois Civic Mission Coalition Convening, Chicago, March 7, 2013 36. “Preparation for Citizenship in the 21st Century” (keynote, given twice), California
Democracy School Civic Learning Initiative meetings, Los Angeles, Feb. 19 and Feb 20, 2013
37. “The Next Horizon for Community Engagement” (opening plenary), Pathways to Achieving Civic Engagement (PACE) Conference, Elon, NC, February 13, 2013
38. “What is citizenship? Changing Perspectives” (opening plenary) and “How to Accomplish Civic Renewal” (closing plenary), North Carolina Campus Compact Civic Engagement Institute, Elon, NC, February 12, 2013
39. “Mapping the field, intellectual movements, and promise for strengthening democracy” Civic Mission of Higher Education conference convened by Bringing Theory to Practice, Washington, DC, January 31, 2013
40. “Featured Keynote: The Effect of State Policy on the Youth Vote,” The Seventh Annual Summit of the Overseas Vote Foundation and U.S. Vote Foundation, Washington, DC, Jan. 24, 2013
17
41. “Plenary: Measures of Civic Outcomes,” Eastern Regional Meeting of “Every Student a Citizen,” an initiative of the Education Commission of the States, Philadelphia, PA, June 15, 2012
42. “Civic Renewal: Theory and Practice,” at “Generations: Age and Citizenship,” the 9th Annual Conference in Citizenship Studies, Wayne State University, Detroit, March 30, 2012
43. “Why Civic Participation and Community Engagement Matter,” at “Community Engagement 2012,” A Convening of Donor Forum Members and Partners, Chicago, March 7, 2012
44. Roundtable to release my paper, “Civic Engagement and Community Information: Five Strategies to Revive Civic Communication,” organized by the Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Chicago, June 10, 2011
45. “What do College Students Gain from Civic Engagement?”: inaugural Civic Engagement & Democracy lecture, Institute for Policy and Civic Engagement, University of Illinois-Chicago, April 21, 2011
46. “What Matters and What Counts in Education?” a speech sponsored by Facing History and Ourselves, Colorado Legacy Foundation and the Donnell-Kay Foundation, Denver, CO, Feb 15, 2011
47. “Concepts of Citizenship,” opening keynote at the Future of Community Engagement in Higher Education Conference, Boston University, June 25, 2010
48. “The Obama Administration’s Active Citizenship Agenda,” University Lecture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Feb. 19, 2010
49. “Civic Engagement Research,” plenary presentation at the National Symposium on Civic Engagement, Public Work and Psychosocial Well-Being convened by the Bringing Theory to Practice Project and others, Washington, DC, November 5, 2009
50. “Closing the Civic Opportunity Gap,” Lifetime of Learning Conference on Service Learning, Civic Responsibility, and Higher Education, organized by the Alabama Poverty Project and others, Birmingham, Alabama, September 25, 2009
51. “Why Obama Won (and What that Says about Democracy and Change in America)”, Presidential Plenary Panel, American Sociological Association Annual Conference, San Francisco, August 8, 2009
52. “Restoring the Civic Mission of Schools in Rhode Island,” 2009 Rhode Island Civic Education Summer Institute, Providence, RI, June 25, 2009
53. “Civic Engagement and Service-Learning Policy for Administrators,” Kids Consortium conference, Framingham, MA, Dec. 4, 2008
54. “Developing the Next Generation of American Citizens,” conference on Service Learning and Civic Education, sponsored by the Iowa Department of Education and others, Des Moines, IA, Nov. 19, 2008
55. “What’s at Stake in Election 2008?” University of Wisconsin-Madison, Pyle Center, September 20, 1008
56. “The Future of Democracy,” SUNY Geneseo, September 15, 2008. 57. Launch of Project ELECT, Educating Learners to Engage in Civics Today, organized
by the Hillsborough County School District, Tampa, Florida, January 31, 2008 58. Lunchtime plenary speech at the 7th International Research Conference on Service-
Learning and Community Engagement, Tampa, Florida, Oct. 7, 2007
18
59. Release of America’s Civic Health Index 2007, National Archives Building, Washington, DC, Oct. 4, 2007
60. “Youth Civic Engagement,” keynote speech at the Cluster VII meeting, Fairfax County (VA) Public Schools, August 3, 2007
61. “The Civic Mission of Schools after Four Years,” keynote address for the 7th Annual R. Freeman Butts Institute on Civic Learning in Teacher Education, Indianapolis, May 18, 2007
62. “American Grassroots Democracy and Civil Society,” keynote for United States State Department International Visitor Leadership Program, Washington, DC, May 3, 2007
63. “Service-Learning: Why We Do It, and How to Show it Works,” Learn & Serve America Grantee Meeting, Hilton Washington Dulles Airport, November 1, 2006.
64. “Youth Civic Engagement: Why and How?” Summit of National Youth Leadership Organizations, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC, September 15, 2006.
65. “The Civic Mission of Higher Education,” keynote at a conference on “TCU and Fort Worth: An Agenda for Collaboration,” Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX, January 28, 2006
66. “Education for Democratic Citizenship,” Congreso Internacional de EducaRed III, Madrid, November 4, 2005.
67. “The Civic Mission of Schools,” plenary speech, Professional Association of Georgia Educators (PAGE) summer conference, Gwinnett County, GA, June 25, 2005.
68. “Six Promising Approaches to Civic Education,” keynote address, Second Annual Conference on Democracy Education, Madison, WI, Nov. 30, 2004.
69. “Civic Mission of Schools,” a general session at a conference hosted by the South Carolina Bar Association for the South Carolina Council for the Social Studies, Greenville, SC, Sept. 23, 2004.
70. “Using Recent Civic Research for State Center Development,” speech at the Youth For Justice State Directors Meeting, Sept. 10, 2004.
71. “The Civic Mission of Schools and a Research Agenda,” keynote address, International Conference on Civic Education Research, New Orleans, Nov. 16, 2003
72. “Service-Learning Research and the Movement for Youth Civic Engagement,” keynote address, Third Annual International Service-Learning Research Conference, Salt Lake City, Nov. 7, 2003
73. “On the Civic Mission of Schools,” speech at the Youth For Justice State Directors Meeting, Sept. 12, 2003.
74. Plenary speech on the subject of “World Wide Web Resources” at the Institute for Community Health Symposium, “Using Technologies that Work,” April 26, 2001
Conferences Organized
1. Annually from 2009-2019, Frontiers of Democracy, a conference for civic renewal at Tufts University’s Tisch College. Frontiers lasts for three days in June or July and draws about 140 activists, scholars, advanced students, and policymakers from multiple countries.
2. The American Political Science Association’s Institute for Civically Engaged Research, Tufts University, June 17-22, 2019.
19
3. “Tolerance, Citizenship, and the Open Society,” at Tisch College, March 21-22, 2019. 4. (with iCivics, the Safra Center, and the Civic Engagement Research Group), Civic
Learning Impact and Measurement Convening, Facebook (Menlo Park, CA), Jan 10-12, 2019
5. (with Danielle Allen and the staff of the Safra Center), A National Convening on Civic Education, Harvard, May 17-18, 2018
6. Co-organized with iCivics, the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and the Florida Joint Center on Citizenship: Democracy at a Crossroads. At the Newseum in Washington, DC, Sept. 21, 2017, with remarks by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Judy Woodruff of PBS NewsHour, former U.S. Secretary of Education John B. King Jr., former NBA star Shane Battier, and others.
7. The National Conference on Citizenship, Washington, DC, Oct. 13-14, 2016 (with NCoC and Tisch College staff)
8. Educating for Democracy, a convening co-sponsored by the Ford Foundation, Generation Citizen, CIRCLE, the Campaign for Civic Mission of Schools, the Spencer Foundation, and UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access, Jan. 23, 2015
9. Civic Learning and National Service Summit, co-organized with the White House Office of Innovation and Civic Participation, the U.S. Department of Education, and the Corporation for National and Community Service. At the Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service at Tufts University, Oct 16, 2014
10. “Youth in Elections,” National Press Club Newsmakers’ press conference, Oct. 9, 2013
11. Co-organized with American Enterprise Institute and others, “Metrics in Civic Education Professional Development,” American Enterprise Institute, Washington, DC, Sept. 22, 2011
12. National Action Civics Conference, Chicago, June 10-11, 2011 (with a group of colleagues)
13. “Federal Policy and Civic Skills,” National Press Club, Washington, DC, April 29, 2010 (with 75 participants, five panels, and 21 speakers)
14. The Obama Administration’s Civic Agenda After Six Months,” Tisch College, Tufts University, July 24, 2009, broadcast nationally by C-SPAN
15. Co-organizer (with James Youniss), “Civic Engagement of Non-College Attending Youth,” at the Spencer Foundation, March 25-25, 2009
16. Co-organizer (with colleagues at Brandeis and Berkeley), Service-Learning Emerging Scholars Work-in-Progress Seminar, College Park, MD, June 14-16, 2007. Second meeting at Brandeis, June 15-17, 2008.
17. Co-organizer (with Rhode Island Campus Compact and Brandeis University), “Program Evaluation and Community-Based Research Conference,” Providence College, June 7, 2007, and “Learn & Serve America Grantees Meeting,” Bryant University, June 8, 2007
18. Co-organizer (with a team of colleagues), Democracy Imperative conference, University of New Hampshire, June 3-6, 2007
19. Co-organizer (with colleagues from Penn State and Oregon State and the Spencer Foundation) of “Youth Civic Engagement Research,” Spencer Foundation, Chicago, May 29-30, 2007.
20
20. Faculty meeting on civic engagement, Oglethorpe University (Atlanta), January 18, 2006
21. Maryland Civic Literacy Summit, Annapolis, MD, Jan. 4, 2007. Convened by act of the State Assembly and co-organized by CIRCLE and the Maryland State Department of Education
22. Press conference on the Civic and Political Health of the Nation (followed by a forum for practitioners), National Press Club, Washington, DC, Oct 3, 2006
23. Co-organizer (with CIRCLE staff), “Immigrant Youth Civic Engagement,” a conference at the New School University in New York City, April 25, 2006
24. Co-organizer (with James Youniss), conference on “Federal Policy for Civic Education.” Washington, DC, Feb. 14, 2006
25. Organizer, CIRCLE conference on “Alternatives to Large, Traditional High Schools: Can They Enhance Students’ Preparation for Work, College, and Democracy?” National Press Club, July 6, 2005. Covered by C-SPAN.
26. Co-organizer (with James Youniss), “Youth and Political Participation,” conference at the Life-Cycle Institute, Catholic University, March 18-19, 2005.
27. Advisory Committee member for the Second Annual Congressional Conference on Civic Education, sponsored by the Majority and Minority Leaders of the US House and Senate and organized by the Alliance for Representative Democracy (2004)
28. Co-organizer (with Rose Marie Nierras), session on “Advocacy and Deliberation” at the Deliberative Democracy Consortium/LogoLink Partners meeting in Washington, DC, June 11, 2004 (participants were activists from nine northern and southern countries).
29. Organizer, Youth Voting Research Meeting: convened leading researchers on the mobilization of young voters, plus leading nonpartisan organizations committed to getting out the youth vote–30 in all (Jan. 5, 2004)
30. Organizing committee for the Researcher & Practitioner Conference of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium, (Oct., 22-24, 2003)
31. Advisory Committee member for the First Annual Congressional Conference on Civic Education (2003)
32. Planning committee for the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools’ preliminary meeting (May 2, 2003) and first Steering Committee retreat (Oct. 2-3,2003).
33. Co-organizer and co-moderator (with Cynthia Gibson) of two conferences on “School-Based Civic Education at the k-12 Level,” sponsored by CIRCLE, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and the Corporation for National and Community Service: Oct. 7-8 and December 10, 2002. These conferences convened researchers and practitioners to develop a consensus statement that was ultimately published as The Civic Mission of Schools (2003).
34. Co-organizer of a conference on “Building the E-Commons,” funded by the Ford Foundation’s Education, Media, Arts & Culture Program (Washington, DC, June 1-2, 2001). This conference brought together leading experts and stakeholders from politics, public broadcasting, landgrant universities, libraries, and other sectors to begin designing a Public Telecommunications Service.
35. Organizer of a conference on “Community Learning Styles,” sponsored by the Charles Kettering Foundation and the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy (Washington, DC, June 25, 2001).
21
36. Organizing committee member and session moderator for a conference on “The Expressive Dimension of Governmental Action: Philosophical and Legal Perspectives,” University of Maryland School of Law, October 13-14, 2000
Invited Talks and Presentations
1. “Universidad como agente generador de ciudadanía,” Ciclo Iberoamericano de Estudios Cívicos, Madrid, July 10, 2019
2. “Civic Engagement Since the Mid-20th Century,” at the American Studies Summer Institute, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Boston, July 8, 2019
3. The Political Thought of Gandhi,” YPOx: Stories from the Front talk at the PAN Peace Summit, Boston, June 12, 2019
4. “Crowd-Sourcing a System Map to Guide an Advocacy Coalition” (paper), at Philanthropy & Social Impact: A Symposium, USC Center on Philanthropy & Public Policy, Los Angeles, CA, March 16, 2019
5. Panel on ethics at a conference on “Empathy …. or Ways of Caring,” Harvard Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, March 15, 2019
6. “Civic Education: Is There Common Ground?” (panel), American Federation of Teachers Albert Shanker Institute, Washington, DC, March 13, 2019
7. “What can, and should, we measure at scale?” (panel), Civic Learning Impact and Measurement Convening, Facebook (Menlo Park, CA), Jan 10-12, 2019
8. “Pao Arts Center Collaboration,” Cases for Culture Workshop, Harvard Business School, Dec. 4, 2018
9. “Responding to the Challenges of Civic Learning: Lessons from Civic Theory and Practice,” The Hastings Center, Nov. 17, 2018.
10. Bridge Alliance National Partners Summit, closing remarks, Washington, DC, Oct. 17, 2018
11. “Civic Education,” Council of Chief State School Officers’ State Collaborative on Assessment and Student Standards (SCASS), Boston, Oct. 16, 2018
12. Data-Driven Strategies to Promote Youth Turnout: discussant (MIT, August 28, 2108)
13. “Loyalty and Complicity for Citizens” (revised title), Social Ontology 2018 Conference, Tufts University, August 23, 2018
14. “What Should We Do? The Bloomington School and the Citizen’s Core Question,” Symposium on Tensions in the Political Economy Project of Elinor C. Ostrom, Mercatus Center, George Mason University, July 31, 2018
15. “Evaluation of the Civic Education Pilot,” Kyiv, Ukraine, July 6, 2018 16. “Identity, Agency and the Power of Story: Meeting the Civic Challenges?”: panel
responding to a keynote address by Helen Haste, Creating Civic Competence: the Critical Challenges, Harvard, May 3-4, 2018
17. Exploring Civic Learning as a Pathway to Equity and Opportunity” (panel) at a conference organized by the National Conference on Citizenship and Philanthropy for Active Civic Engagement, Washington, DC, March 1, 2018
18. “What Should We Do? The Bloomington School, Deliberative Democracy, Nonviolent Resistance, and the Citizen’s Core Question,” 2017 Conference on Voluntary Governance, Michigan State University, Dec. 3, 2017
22
19. “What can Academics Do for Practitioners, What Can Academics Gain from Practitioners?” (panel), Moving Redistricting Reform meeting, Harvard Kennedy School, Nov. 9, 2017
20. Policy Innovation (panel) at Democracy at a Crossroads, the Newseum in Washington, DC, Sept. 21, 2017
21. “Politics without Partisanship: Navigating Controversial Issue Discussions in a Time of Polarization,” Massachusetts Civics Literacy Conference, Boston, May 8, 2017
22. John Dewey Society Symposium: “Creative Democracy: Democratic Education in the Era of Clinton v. Trump” (panel), San Antonio, April 27 2017
23. “The Hollowing Out of US Democracy,” University of Southern California, April 19, 2017
24. “Modeling Moral Thought in Network Terms,”Association for Moral Education, Harvard University, Dec. 9, 2016
25. Moderator, “The Future of the Field” plenary panel, Association for Moral Education, Harvard University, Dec. 9, 2016
26. “Authors-meet-critics: Dilemmas of educational ethics” (panelist), Association for Moral Education, Harvard University, Dec. 8, 2016
27. “How Automatic Voter Registration Can Transform Democracy,” Suffolk University School of Law, Nov. 29, 2016.
28. “Civic Media: Technology, Design, Practice,” (panelist), Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University November 16, 2016
29. “What can teachers do to encourage their students to engage in political participation? (session), Teaching about the 2016 Elections Conference, Madison, WI, Sept. 24, 2016
30. “Taking Informed Action” (session organizer and facilitator), First Annual Massachusetts Civics Literacy Conference, Boston, May 23, 2016
31. “Taking Informed Action” (session organizer, presenter, and facilitator), New York State Council for the Social Studies Annual Meeting, Albany, NY, March 31, 2016
32. “Systems Change and Culture of Health” (panel), Sharing Knowledge to Build a Culture of Health Conference, Baltimore, MD, March 10, 2016
33. Youth voting presentation, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Feb. 10, 2016
34. “Foundations” panel at the Boston Civic Media conference, Cambridge, MA, June 9, 2015
35. “Youth Disaffection from Politics: The US Case,” at the Coloquio Internacional ¿Hacia dónde vamos? Desafección política y gobernabilidad, un reto político, Banco de Desarrollo de América Latina (CAF) and Universidad de Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, June 3, 2015
36. “Democracy in the Digital Age,” at “Redes sociales y ciudadanía activa. Retos de la educación en la era digital,” Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo, Valencia, June 1, 2015
37. Sessions at the 2014 National Council for the Social Studies conference: “Exploring Multiple Methods of Quantitative Research” (panelist), “New Research on Pedagogical Practices of Highly Effective Civics Teachers” (panelist); “How to Accomplish Taking Informed Action” (moderator). Boston, Nov. 20-22, 2014
38. “Beyond the Buzz: What Citizen Engagement Strategies are Really Working” (panel), CityLab 2014, Los Angeles, Sept. 30, 2014
23
39. “What Should We Do as Citizens? How to Think About Changing Society,” Brigham Young University (Provo, UT), Sept 25, 2014
40. Panel on Civic Education after the Digital Revolution, American Political Association, Washington, DC, August 29, 2014
41. “The Bloomington School and Civic Studies,” at the Workshop on the Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN June 21, 2014
42. Panel on civic education at the Southeastern Chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA), Nashville, May 3, 2014
43. Panel on “best practices in civic engagement across two- and four- year colleges,” Midwest Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Chicago, April 5th 2014
44. “State of the Research,” at “Service as a Strategy to Advance the Educational Potential of Low- and Moderate-Income Youth,” a meeting sponsored by America Forward, Be the Change, ServiceNation, and OpportunityNation, Washington, DC, Feb 21, 2014
45. “Deliberation in the Classroom” (professional development day for Chicago Public Schools teachers), Chicago, Jan 24, 2014
46. “We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For” (book talk), Teaching for Change/Busboys & Poets, Washington, DC Jan 22, 2014
47. Author Meets Critics panel for We Are The Ones We Have Been Waiting For, Southern Political Science Association, New Orleans, Jan 20, 2014
48. “What is Civic Studies” panel (as part of a Civic Studies Miniconference), Southern Political Science Association, New Orleans, Jan 20, 2014
49. “Measuring Civic Engagement” (panel), New England Association of Schools and Colleges convention, Boston, MA, Dec. 4, 2013
50. “Civics in the C3 Framework” (solo session), National Council for the Social Studies Annual Conference, St. Louis, MO, Nov. 23, 2013
51. “New and Exciting Research to Inform Civic Learning Classroom Practices” (panelist), National Council for the Social Studies Annual Conference, St. Louis, MO, Nov. 22, 2013
52. “Rethinking Foundations of Youth Engagement: Challenges and Possibilities of Young Citizen Engagement in Research and Practice” (panelist), National Communication Association Conference, Washington, DC, Nov. 21, 2013
53. Book talk on We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For, Hood College in Frederick, MD, Nov. 20, 2013
54. “Engagement, Through Thick and Thin,” Philanthropy for Active Civic Engagement (PACE) convening, Pocantico, NY, Oct 28, 2013
55. “The State of Civic Education Today” (panelist), American Board of Trial Advocates Forum, Austin, TX, Oct. 12, 2013
56. “The Promise of Civic Renewal,” Civic Media Lunch, MIT Media Lab, Oct. 10, 2013 57. “What We Must Do for Civics,” National Conference on Citizenship, Sept. 20, 2013 58. “Power and Persuasion from Below: Civic Renewal, Youth Engagement, and the Case
for Civic Studies” (Presidential Theme Panel, chair and presenter) American Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, Aug 30, 2013
59. Roundtable: The Measurement and Assessment of Civic Learning in K -12 and College Education, American Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, Aug 31, 2013
24
60. APSA Working Group on Young People’s Politics (co-convenor with James Sloam, Royal Holloway, University of London, American Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, August 29, 30 and 31, 2013
61. “Connecting for Good: How Colleges and Universities Can Work Together to Improve Connecticut’s Civic & Economic Health,” Connecticut Campus Compact’s Inaugural Presidents’ Leadership Summit, Yale University, September 13, 2013
62. “Civic Renewal,” YMCA National Leadership Symposium, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, CA, April 3-5, 2013
63. “Knowledge: What Should Young Americans Know about Democracy?” (panel) at “Civics Education: Why it Matters to Democracy, Society and You,” a conference co-sponsored by the Harvard Law School, The Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and Harvard Graduate School of Education, Harvard, April 1, 2013
64. “Assessment of Student Learning in Community Engagement” and “Civic Engagement and Community Information: Five Strategies to Revive Civic Communication” (two workshops), North Carolina Campus Compact Civic Engagement Institute, Elon, NC, February 12, 2013
65. “How do we do Civic Education in Higher Education?” (workshop), Pathways to Achieving Civic Engagement (PACE) Conference, Elon, NC, February 13, 2013
66. “Using Evidence to Promote Engaged Learning and Student Well-Being” (panel), American Association of Colleges & Universities annual conference, Atlanta, GA, Jan. 25, 2013
67. “Education, Citizenship, and Democracy” (panel), Netter Center, University of Pennsylvania, Nov. 12, 2012
68. “The Modern University” (panel), National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Science, Technology, and Law, Woods Hole, MA, Oct 23, 2013
69. “Engaged Citizenship, Civil Society and Social Justice,” Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, Oct. 5, 2012
70. “Exploring the Link Between Civic Engagement and Unemployment” (panel), National Conference on Citizenship, Philadelphia, PA, Sept. 14, 2012
71. “No Citizen Left Behind Book Talk,” Harvard Graduate School of Education, April 25, 2012 (moderator)
72. Invited testimony on measuring civic engagement before the National Academies of Science, Committee on National Statistics (CNSTAT), March 1, 2012
73. “Teaching America: The Case for Civic Education” (panel), The Brookings Institution, Washington, DC, Jan. 9, 2012
74. “The Fate of Civic Education in a Connected World: A ‘Fred Friendly’ Seminar,” Berkman Center, Harvard Law School, December 5, 2011
75. “Civic Scholarship and a Field of Civic Studies,” Bringing Theory to Practice National Civic Seminar, Wye River (MD), November 4, 2011
76. “Education for Civil Society,” presented at Civics 2.0: Citizenship Education for a New Generation conference, American Enterprise Institute, Washington, DC, October 20, 2011
77. “How Ethical Particularism Saves the Enlightenment Ideal,” conference on Self Among Selves: Emotion and the Common Life, Maxwell School, Syracuse University, Sept. 30, 2011
78. “Civic Commonsense: The Civic Mission of Schools (panel), 66th Annual National Conference on Citizenship, Philadelphia, PA, September 15, 2011
25
79. “Making the Connections” (panel on relationships among engaged learning, civic engagement, and psychosocial well-being), Bringing Theory to Practice National Retrieval Conference, Washington, DC, June 13, 2011
80. The Case for Action Civics (panel), National Action Civics Conference, Chicago, June 10, 2011
81. “The Information Needs of Communities,” BiblioNews conference, MIT, April 7, 2011
82. “Program Assessment and Metrics,” American Enterprise Institute conference on Best Practices in Civic Education Programs, Montpelier, VA, March 23, 2011
83. “What is the Role of Public Education in Youth Civic Engagement?” (panelist), CUNY Graduate School, New York City, March 17, 2011
84. “If They Protest, Have We Succeeded?” (panelist), Harvard Graduate School of Education, March 8, 2011
85. “Civic Engagement and Higher Education in the United States: What Do College Students Gain From Civic Engagement Experiences?” The New School University, New York City, Feb. 9, 2011 (co-presenter with Constance Flanagan, University of Wisconsin)
86. National Conference on Citizenship Civic Innovators Forum, “The Foundation of BIG Citizenship: Citizen-Centered Solutions” (moderator) and “An Evolving Relationship: How Philanthropy and the Executive Branch Work Together to Promote Civic Engagement” (panelist), Washington, DC Sept 16, 2010
87. Invited participant, session leader at the Aspen Institute Forum on Communications and Society (FOCAS), August 16-18, 2010
88. “Conceptions of Citizenship Online,” American Democracy Project Annual Meeting, Providence, RI, June 19, 2010
89. “Reflections on Labor Disputes and Teachable Moments” (moderator of a plenary session organized because the conference hotel came under union boycott), American Democracy Project Annual Meeting, Providence, RI, June 19, 2010
90. “Reforming the Humanities,” Centro de Estudos Comparatistas, Faculdade de Letras, University of Lisbon, Portugal, May 20, 2010.
91. “Civics: What are We Teaching Our Children and Our Teachers,” American Enterprise Institute, Washington, DC, April 23, 2010
92. Panel discussion: “Civic Identity Development in Adolescence: Theoretical, Empirical, Normative, and Practical Issues,” Society for Research on Adolescence, Philadelphia, March 13, 2010
93. Discussant, panel on “Features of the Learning Environment That Promote Student Voice,” Society for Research on Adolescence, Philadelphia, March 12, 2010
94. “The Civic Mission of Schools,” National Council for the Social Studies Annual Conference, Atlanta, GA, Nov. 13, 2009
95. “Youth in Action,” Learn & Serve America Grantees Conference, Arlington, VA, October 15, 2009
96. “Everybody can Serve,” National Conference on Volunteering and Service, San Francisco, June 23, 2009
97. Presidential Session: “Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Democratic Citizenship, Civic Learning, and Youth Political Participation,” American Education Research Association Conference, San Diego, April 15, 2009
26
98. (With Constance Flanagan) “Young Adults and Civic Engagement,” Future of Children Transition to Adulthood Conference, Princeton University, April 2, 2009
99. “The Millennial Pendulum,” talk at the New America Foundation event on “The Latest Generation: The Unique Outlook of ‘Millennials’ and How They Will Reshape America,” February 18, 2009, broadcast on C-SPAN II.
100. “Political Participation among Young Voters,” Annette Strauss Institute, New Politics Institute, Austin, TX, Nov. 15, 2008
101. Discussant on Jeffrey Henig’s talk about charter schools, Inaugural Conference of the Mosakowski Institute for Public Enterprise, Clark University, Worcester, MA, Nov. 13, 2008
102. “What Happens on November 5th? Activiting Citizenship (No Matter Who Wins),” Bates College Harwood Center Civic Forum, Sept. 24, 2008
103. “America’s Civic Health Index 2008? National Conference on Citizenship, National Archives, Washington, DC, Sept. 22, 2008
104. “Measuring the Impact of Youth Voluntary Service (discussant/presenter), The World Bank, Washington, DC, May 8, 2008
105. “The Purpose of the University” (panel), Hillel National Summit on the University and the Jewish Community, Washington, March 27, 2008
106. “Millennials Talk Politics” (panel), NASPA (Student Affairs Professionals) 2008 Annual Conference, Boston, March 10, 2008
107. “Who Knows Best How to Educate You for Citizenship?” Syracuse University, February 18, 2008
108. “Building Citizen Competence,” World Bank conference on “Generating Genuine Demand with Social Accountability Mechanisms,” Paris, November 1, 2007
109. “Assessing Civic Learning: What Do We Know about What Students Know?” (panel), American Association of Colleges & Universities, Networking for Academic Renewal Conference, Denver, CO, Oct. 19, 2007
110. “Politics and the Internet: Medium of Maximum Individual Choice,” Federal Library and Information Center Committee (FLICC) forum on Social Computing and the Process of Governance, Library of Congress, Washington, DC, Oct. 12, 2007
111. “Classroom Teaching Practices and Student Civic Engagement–New Evidence from the 2006 Civic and Political Health of the Nation Survey,” 7th International Research Conference on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, Tampa, Florida, Oct. 7, 2007
112. “K-12 Civic Education and Service-Learning – An Introduction to the Current Literature, Resources and Tools,” 7th International Research Conference on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, Tampa, Florida, Oct. 6, 2007
113. “Opportunities for Youth Civic Development,” plenary panel (with James Youniss), Learn & Serve America Grantees Meeting, Arlington, VA September 27, 2007
114. “The Rationale for Service-Learning,” PANIM’s National Educators’ Institute for Jewish Service-Learning, College Park, MD, August 19, 2007
115. “Issue-Based Civic Education,” presentation at the Council for Citizenship Education, Washington, DC, August 2, 2007
116. “The Future of Democracy” (book launch with a speech), Council for Excellence in Government, Washington, DC, July 26, 2007
27
117. “From Periodic Projects to Lasting Solutions: Citizen-Centered Civic Engagement” (panelist), National Conference on Volunteering and Service, Philadelphia, July 16, 2007
118. “A New Progressive Era?” Labor and Employment Relations Association National Policy Forum, Washington, DC, June 14, 2007
119. “Democracy in Action,” cyzygy ’07 (the City Year national convention), St. Anselm’s College, Manchester, New Hampshire, June 12, 2007
120. “America’s Civic Health Index,” Pennsylvania State University, April 14, 2007 121. “Research on Civic Engagement,” Tufts University, February 9, 2007 122. “Civic Renewal: Some Issues in Moral Philosophy and Political Practice,” Duke
University, January 30, 2007 123. Panels on public policy and on youth voting at the Fourth Annual Congressional
Conference on Civic Education, Washington, DC, November 19 and 20, 2006. 124. Closing plenary panel, Campus Compact’s 20th Anniversary Visioning Summit,
Chicago, Oct 17, 2006 125. “Policies for Civic Education,” University of Georgia (conference on “Youth
Indifference to the News”), Oct. 10, 2006. 126. “The State of Civic Health,” President’s Council on Service and Civic
Participation, Washington, DC 2006, Oct. 12, 2006 127. “The Civic and Political Health of the Nation,” National Press Club, Oct. 3, 2006. 128. Upper Midwest Campus Compact/Spencer Foundation meeting on civic
engagement in higher education: facilitated a plenary discussion of research: Madison, WI, April 28, 2006.
129. Society for Research on Adolescence, panel on “Civic Engagement in Minority and Immigrant Youth” (discussant), San Francisco, March 26, 2006.
130. Launch of the National Advisory Council of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, National Press Club, Washington, DC, April 17, 2006. I spoke along with Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, Gov. Roy Romer, and others. The event was televised by C-SPAN and covered in a nationally syndicated column by David Broder.
131. “The Arts of Patriotism: Difficult Dialogues”: panel presentation at the Annual Conference of Imagining America, New Brunswick, NJ, Oct. 1, 2005.
132. “Latest Research on Civic Education,” Third Annual Congressional Conference on Civic Education, Washington, DC, Sept. 26, 2005.
133. “Civic Education,” presentation to the American Bar Association Commission on Civic Education and the Separation of Powers, Washington, DC, Sept. 15, 2005.
134. “The National Perspective”: presentation at a conference on Rethinking Civics Education: The Third Branch in American Democracy, hosted by the Judicial Conference of California, WestEd, and WGBH-Boston, San Francisco, April 28, 2005.
135. “The Problem of Online Misinformation and the Role of Schools,” conference on Fast Communication and Quality of Information, University of Tilburg (Netherlands), December 21, 2004.
136. Panel moderator, session on research, Second Annual Congressional Conference on Civic Education, Washington, DC, Dec. 6, 2004.
137. “The Prince George’s County Information Commons,” American Library Association Workshop on Libraries and the Information Commons, Cerritos, CA,
28
Oct. 29-31, 2004.
138. “Youth in Politics” panelist, National Symposium of Youth Civic Engagement, University of Virginia Center for Politics, Charlottesville, VA, September 14, 2004.
139. “Best Practices Supported by Research,” at the Summer Institute of the Annenberg Foundation Civic Education Initiative, Washington, July 19, 2004
140. “Kids, Communities, and the ‘Scholarly Communication Commons’”, presented at the Workshop on Scholarly Communication as a Commons, Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, March 31-April 2, 2004.
141. Panel presentation on the civic mission of higher education, at a Conference on “Public Work in Higher Education: Theory and Practice of Civic Engagement,” University of Minnesota, March 18, 2004
142. “The Latest Studies on Youth Civic Engagement and Voting,” presentation at the National Association of Secretaries of State New Millennium Young Voters Summit, Washington, DC, February 17, 2004.
143. “The Civic Mission of Schools and Higher Education,” presentation at the national Learn & Serve America grantees meeting, Washington, Dec. 10, 2003
144. Presentation on The Civic Mission of Schools, U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Safe and Drug-Free Schools National Conference on “Meeting the Challenge: The Science and Practice of Safe and Drug-Free Schools,” Oct. 27, 2003
145. Panelist, First Annual Congressional Conference on Civic Education, Sept. 22, 2003
146. Panel moderator, National Conference on Citizenship 50th Anniversary Meeting, Sept. 16, 2003
147. “Evidence About Civic Education in Schools: A Researcher-Practitioner Dialogue,” Annual Scientific Meeting, International Society of Political Psychology, July 8, 2003
148. “Building the Electronic Commons,” Center for the Study of Law and Society Luncheon Series, co-sponsored by the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology, Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California Berkeley, April 21, 2003.
149. Presentation on youth civic engagement research, National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium conference, April 12, 2003.
150. Panel presentation on the intellectual roots of deliberation at the Society for Values in Higher Education’s Conference on Discussion, Dialogue, and Deliberation, April 2, 2003.
151. “Local Governments and Independent Civic Websites,” presentation at the American Society for Public Administration Annual Conference, February 17, 2003
152. Remarks at the launch of the Civic Mission of Schools report, Willard Hotel, Washington, DC, February 13, 2003
153. Panel chair for “Communitarian Approaches to Cyberspace” at the American Association of Law Schools Annual Meeting, January 4, 2003
154. Panel presentation on a panel entitled “Philosophical Perspectives,” in a conference on The Rule of Law and the Information Age: Reconciling Private Rights and Public Interest, Catholic University Law School, Oct. 10, 2002
29
155. CIRCLE press conference to release youth poll, National Press Club, March 4, 2002 (panelist)
156. CIRCLE introductory press conference at the National Press Club, January 9, 2002 (speaker).
157. Panelist at a session on engaging young voters, Bipartisan Conference of the Virginia House of Delegates, Staunton, VA, April 19-21, 2002
158. “Building the E-Commons,” lecture in the Albert J. Shipka Speakers Series at Youngstown State University (Ohio), February 5, 2002.
159. “The State of Civic Culture and Trust in the United States,” a presentation for the Civil Society Task Force (organized by Grupo Esquel), Washington, DC, September 22, 2000
160. Formal comments on a paper (“Information Technology and the Social Construction of Information Policy”) presented at the “Accounting, Information Technology, and Public Policy” conference in College Park, August 12, 2000
161. Briefing on civic renewal at the annual board meeting of the Kettering Foundation, June 2000.
162. “Jane Addams’s Work,” lecture at Rutgers-Camden, November 17, 1999. 163. “Index of National Civic Health”: presentation at the World Bank Conference on
Civil Society, Foreign Aid and Sustainable Development, June 21, 1999 164. “The Press in a Deliberative Democracy: On Public Journalism and its Critics,”
invited paper delivered at the University of South Carolina College of Journalism and Mass Communication, October 13, 1998
165. “Public Journalism”: presentation at a Maxwell School conference on citizenship and civil society, October 1995
Blog
“Peter Levine’s Weblog”: a “blog” on civic engagement, with an entry posted every work day since January 2003. Received 92,000 unique visitors and 135,000 page views in 2016. Also author of posts on The Huffington Post.
Media
CIRCLE’s research has been cited in most national news organs, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, and Los Angeles Times. I have been interviewed on MSNBC, CNN, Al-Jazeera, CBS radio news, CBS television news, NPR’s “All Things Considered,” and many local television and radio programs. Between July and November 2008, CIRCLE was cited in 1,253 newspaper, magazine, broadcast, or web stories, including 829 print media articles
Other Professional Activities
Expert witness in North Carolina N.A.A.C.P. v. McCrory. (Expert report written with Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg. Testimony in federal court on July 20, 2015)
Expert report in League of Women Voters of Florida v. Detzner, 2018 Expert report in College Democrats at the University of Michigan, et al. v. Johnson,
et al., 2018
30
University of Missouri System, external review committee for Extension and Engagement, 2017
Tufts Research and Scholarship Strategic Planning Steering Committee and chair of the Equitable Society Working Group, 2017-2018
Tufts Research and Graduate Program Council, 2016- Tufts Data Intensive Studies Center, Advisory Committee member, 2016 Center for the Humanities at Tufts (CHaT) board, 2016- Tufts Institute for Innovation, Executive Committee member, 2014-16 Tisch College Community Research Center, member, 2008-16 Tufts University Research Day, Faculty Committee member, 2016 Tufts University Committee for Teaching and Faculty Development, member, 2014 Tufts Arts & Sciences Dean Search Committee, member, 2014 Chair, external review committee, Duke University’s Kenan Institute of Ethics (2014) Search committees: University of Maryland School of Public Policy (chair); Tufts
Dean of Arts & Sciences; Tufts University Data Intensive Studies Center, Newhouse Professor of Civic Studies (co-chair), Department of Public Health and Community Medicine (co-chair), CIRCLE (several).
Tenure or promotion reviews: Bowling Green University, Harvard University, University of Colorado, University of Kentucky, University of Mississippi, University of Wisconsin, etc.
Journal and university press peer reviews: frequent. PhD committees: Seth Avakian, Northeastern; Diana Schor, Brandeis; Perri Leviss,
UMAss Boston; Melissa Comber, Maryland; Steven Maloney, Maryland; Mary Fitzgerald, Maryland; Josh Littenberg-Tobias, Boston College; Tina Patterson, North Carolina; Erhardt Greaeff, MIT; Marilyn Price-Mitchell; Tina Won Sherman, Maryland; Jonas Brodin, Maryland; Lori Keleher, Maryland; Deb Bobek, Tufts; Sarah Shugars, Tufts.
Grants and contracts
I have been Principal Investigator on 85 grants or contracts totaling $9.3 million and the co-PI on three grants totaling $8 million. Since 2016, as Associate Dean, I have overseen two grant-funded centers (CIRCLE and the Institute for Democracy and Higher Education) whose directors are usually the PIs on their grants. Their annual income, not shown here, is between $1 million and $2 million. I have also assisted the Dean of Tisch College in raising grants and gifts.
Obtained at Tufts University since July 2012
American Association of University Women
NEA/AAUW Survey on Gender and Leadership $7,500
American Political Science Association
APSA Institute of Civically Engaged Research $15,000
Bill of Rights Institute (BORI)
Documents for Freedom evaluation $56,500
31
Bringing Theory to Practice campus dialog grant $5,000
Center for Public Integity (CPI)
Impact Evaluation of Media Influence on the Treatment of Money in Politics $50,000
Charles Koch Institute(CPI)
Tolerance, Citizenship, and the Open Society (conference) $50,000
Charles F. Kettering Foundation
Postdoctoral Fellowship in Civic Science $67,111
Close Up Foundation Close Up Foundation formative evaluation $18,000
Corporation for National and Community Service
Effects of national service on employment (renewed twice) $301,715
Democracy Fund News Literacy Education $ 125,000
Democracy Fund Monkey Cage blog series $13,200
Democracy Fund with Knight Foundation and McCormick Foundation
Evaluation of the Online News Association $50,000
DePauw Sub (Carnegie Corp. Prime)
Mapping the Humanities in Indiana $40,000
Engelhard Foundation Moving the Needle $75,000
Ford Foundation via National Council for the Social Studies planning grant $10,000
Foundation for Civic Leadership
National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement (NSLVE) $310,065
Foundation for Civic Leadership and The Bernard and Audre Rapoport Foundation
National Study of Learning, Voting and Engagement (The PI reports to me; I am not the PI) $853,875
32
Healthy Democracy, Inc. Massachusetts Citizens Initiative Review $25,000
Indiana Humanities Council
Indiana Humanities Council mapping project $7,250
Jobs for the Future Deeper Learning for Civic Engagement $20,000
Knight Foundation Generation Citizen evaluation $95,900
Library of Congress Interactive Civics $7,500
National Conference on Leadership NCoC Civic Health Index $84,000
Omidyar Network Social Emotional Learning Planning Grant $15,000
Omidyar Network evaluation of several election-related initiatives $295,000
Online News Association Evaluation $50,000
Points of Light Foundation
Service Works Program Evaluation $ 25,000
Poynter Institute PunditFact evaluation $45,000
S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation
Research on K-12 Education II $175,000
Spencer Foundation Evaluation of Illinois Professional Development $50,000
Spencer Foundation
Civic Education, Youth Engagement, and Public Policy $350,000
33
Spencer Foundation
How Teachers Address Inequality in Their Instruction $25,000
State of Florida through University of South Florida
Partnership for Civic Learning $ 50,000
Street Law, Inc. Civic Education in Ukraine $16,800
The Bernard and Audre Rapoport Foundation
Discretionary Voter Suppression and College Students $47,162
The McCormick Foundation
Illinois Civic Mission of Schools coalition assessment $15,000
The McCormick Foundation
National Survey of Civics Teachers $30,000
The Nonzero Foundation
Bloggingheads evaluation (SRA) $15,000
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
Who Are the Most Civically Engaged Americans? $50,000
Tides Foundation youth voting survey $100,000
Tufts Collaborates (internal)
Arts Combating Gentrification $49,000
University of Central Florida, Lou Frey Institute
Partnership for Civic Learning $50,000
US Dept of Ed. primed through Filament Games
Discussion Maker evaluation $120,000
W.T Grant Foundation
Reducing Inequality through Youth Civic Empowerment $125,000
WT Grant Foundation Engaging stakeholders $25,000
Zussman & Silicon Valley Comm. Fund Gift
Social-Emotional Learning and Civic Engagement $ 83,000
34
Grants and contracts at Tufts University during 2008-2012, for which I was Principal Investigator
Corporation for National and Community Service
Social network for college students $570,000
Foundation for Civic Leadership
National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement $310,000
US Department of Education (via University of Wisconsin prime)
Legislative Aide experiment $110,000
Corporation for National and Community Service Research on volunteerism $128,000
Bridging Theory to Practice Psychosocial determinants of civic engagement $100,000
S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation
Research on Civic Education $100,000
Next Generation Learning Challenge iCivics evaluation $82,714
National Conference on Citizenship Civic Health Index $80,000
Kettering Foundation Research on non-college youth $72,000
Spencer Foundation
Longitudinal Study of Controversial Issues Discussion in High Schools $25,000
New America Foundation
Change and Stability in Perceptions of the Social Contract $25,000
Corporation for National and Community Service (via Penn State)
Effects of AmeriCorps service $25,000
Massachusetts Department of Education
Green in the Middle Evaluation $29,104
Aspen Institute White paper on civic communications $20,000
35
Civic Enterprises LLC
“Civic Lives of Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation Enduring Freedom Veterans” $20,000
Corporation for National and Community Service
Volunteer Service as a Development Opportunity $18,000
Abt Associates
consulting on service-learning randomized field experiment $10,492
Omidyar Network Strategy memo $5,000
Grants and contracts for which I was principal investigator at the University of Maryland (2006-08)
Carnegie Corporation of New York
General support (2006-7) $1 million
The Pew Charitable Trusts General support (2005-6) $1,310,450
Beldon Foundation, JEHT Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, and Solidago Fund
Pooled fund for randomized field studies of voting $250,000
Kettering Foundation (three grants)
College students and politics $151,000
Ford Foundation Narrowing of the K-12 curriculum $100,000
National Conference on Citizenship (four contracts) Civic health reports $139,980
Kellogg Foundation (via Brandeis University prime)
Emerging scholars in service-learning $44,000
Spencer Foundation
The Changing Transition to Adulthood $49,070
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Meetings on developmental psychology and political science $34,100
36
Case Foundation
Make it Your Own Award competition evaluation $30,000
Bonner Foundation Evaluation $19,000
Tides Foundation Precinct-level turnout study $10,000
Deliberative Democracy Consortium Research paper $10,000
Generation Engage Program evaluation $5,000
Ford Foundation (coordinator, not PI)
Democracy Imperative project on the digital commons $125,000
Grosvenor Fund, National Geographic Foundation
Community mapping project (2004) $106,000
Kettering Foundation Website on democratic theory for journalists $35,500
The Florence and John Schumann Foundation
The New Progressive Era (book) $30,000
Kettering Foundation
public engagement in Federal agencies (2001) $15,000
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek. Overall PI was Anton Vedder, University of Tilburg
The Reliability of Medical Information on the Internet 10,400 Euros
Kettering Foundation Oral history project $9,700
Grants and contracts obtained for CIRCLE, when I was co-principal investigator and deputy director (2001-6)
The Pew Charitable Trusts General operating support, 2001-5 $4,570,000
The Pew Charitable Trusts General operating support, 2006-7 $2,980,000
Carnegie Corporation of New York
General operating support, 2001-5 $500,000
37