“Our World is not Zero-Sum”

Four former national security advisors, from both Republican and Democratic administrations, agree: the world order is being challenged. At a Hurst Lecture Series event in Aspen this August, these foreign-policy experts focused on external threats to America—like Russia.

“Our role is and remains indispensable,” Susan Rice, who served under Barack Obama, said of America’s global leadership. “Our world has never been zero-sum.” Rice added that relationships with allies need to be renewed, with the understanding that US leadership benefits the whole planet. Stephen Hadley, national security advisor for George W. Bush, agreed but advised an adjustment to current US strategy. “If we want others to do more,” he said, “we’ll have to give them more of a role, more of a stake.”

All agreed that President Trump should get tough on Russia and secure a stronger negotiating position. They suggested strengthening the US military in Europe, increasing the defense budget, and acknowledging Russia’s election hacking. But, as Institute Trustee Condoleezza Rice, also a national security advisor for Bush, pointed out, managing confrontation begins at home. “This isn’t ‘America first,’ a term I don’t like,” she said. “But it does start at home. It was a confident America that built the liberal order, and it has to be a confident America that sustains it.”

Longform Publications Section 4: Strengthening Practices to Improve Job Quality

Tools: Employee Ownership

View tools and resources related to employee ownership.

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Centering Workers in Workforce Development

The Chicagoland Workforce Funder Alliance collaborates with employers and stakeholders to boost employment, earnings, and equity for local workers.

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Lessons and Leadership To Foster Economic Justice for Illinois Workers

LEP trains workers to promote equity, enforce rights, build unions, develop leaders, ensure workplace safety, and advance economic justice.

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Worker Owned and Worker Driven

While the rideshare apps have increased convenience, they’ve eroded job quality. See how the Drivers’ Cooperative is helping to end exploitative conditions.

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Creating Employee-Owned Businesses That Provide Good Jobs and Succeed

Through employee ownership, The Industrial Commons is building a new Southern working class that erases the inequities of generational poverty.

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Strengthening the Hidden Resilience Workforce

We see the effects of climate change, but we rarely see the people who help to rebuild — and they often lack safe conditions, decent pay, or benefits.

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Advancing a Pro-Worker, Pro-Climate Agenda in Texas

The Texas Climate Jobs Project advances a pro-worker, pro-climate agenda — helping to solve the climate crisis while creating millions of good jobs.

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Organizing and Coalition Building for Structural Change

LAANE, led by Job Quality Fellow Roxana Tynan, is fighting to build an economy rooted in good jobs, thriving communities, and a healthy environment.

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Organizing Unemployed and Underemployed Workers

UWU, led by Job Quality Fellow Neidi Dominguez, engages unemployed/underemployed workers, a population that has not been mobilized at scale since the 1930s.

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How Local Journalism Can Bring Communities Together

MIT Center for Constructive Communication Director Deb Roy explains how the caricatures Republicans and Democrats paint of each other diverge from reality, and the ways local newsrooms can leverage their “trust capital” and emerging technology to promote listening and understanding amid disagreement.