We the People:

Pluralism in Real Life

By
Learn more about Chris Walsh.
Chris Walsh
Director, Freedom and Democracy
George W. Bush Institute
Learn more about William McKenzie.
William McKenzie
Senior Editorial Advisor
George W. Bush Institute
Download PDF

 

Have you ever wondered whether a diverse, complex society can hold together when it feels like so many forces are pulling it apart? Pluralism says that it can.

 

Download the Full Toolkit (PDF) 

 

Download the one-pager (PDF)

 

We define pluralism as the commitment of people – of varying beliefs and backgrounds – to respect each other as equal citizens in a democracy. This guide is designed to help American leaders appreciate that meaning and implement it.

“It is the American story – a story of flawed and fallible people, united across the generations by grand and enduring ideals. The grandest of these ideals is an unfolding American promise that everyone belongs, that everyone deserves a chance, that no insignificant person was ever born.”
– George W. Bush
Forty-third President of the United States,
January 20, 2001, Inaugural Address

Inspired by the examples of President and Mrs. Bush, as well as alumni of the George W. Bush Institute’s leadership programs, we wrote this to be a pragmatic, plain-spoken resource for leaders across the country of various sectors and missions. We believe it will help you to work with fellow citizens of different stripes on building a more perfect union.

The contents are taken from a series of interviews, facilitated group conversations, and analyses that we conducted across various segments of American society – local and national government, faith organizations, university campuses, media, private sector leaders, nonprofits, and rural schools. Many were featured in the Bush Institute’s Pluralism Challenge project.

We identified nine actions that can amplify American pluralism:

  • Build a foundation for respectful engagement.
  • Establish a shared mission, goal, or challenge.
  • Create better dialogue through better disagreement.
  • Avoid a conversion mindset.
  • Model pluralism as a leader.
  • Incorporate pluralism into decision-making.
  • Make pluralism a duty of citizenship.
  • Question your own assumptions.
  • Enjoy pluralism’s lighter side.

We recommend that leaders commit to these nine practices with their teams, organizations, and communities. It won’t be easy, but it does get better with practice. And while this may not be an exhaustive list of habits, we believe they’ll help all of us become stronger pluralists – and, as a result, strengthen America.