NATIONAL ISSUES FORUMS
National Issues Forums (NIF) is a nonpartisan, nationwide network of locally sponsored public forums for the consideration of public policy issues. It is rooted in the simple notion that people need to come together to reason and talk — to deliberate about common problems. These forums offer citizens the opportunity to join together to deliberate, to make choices with others about ways to approach difficult issues and to work toward creating reasoned public judgment.
The Minnesota Humanities Center invites members of the community to participate in an upcoming National Issues Forum:
RACIAL AND ETHNIC TENSIONS: WHAT SHOULD WE DO? REGISTER
Thursday, March 11, 2010
1:00-3:00 pm
Audience: Everyone is welcome!
Fee: None, but space is limited and registration is required
Location: Minnesota Humanities Center
987 Ivy Avenue East,
St. Paul, MN 55106
The rich diversity of its people may be America’s greatest promise — and its greatest challenge. We have made great strides in breaking down barriers that once separated us. But we still struggle with a legacy of racial discrimination and ethnic disparity, even if their forms are subtler today. What can we do about the troubling racial and ethnic problems that still divide us?
Remember to check back as we finalize more events in the series or contact Eden Bart, Outreach Specialist at 651-772-4261 or
eden@minnesotahumanities.org and she will gladly add you to the e-invite list.
PAST FORUMS
January 12, 2010 Issue: Too Many Children Left Behind: How Do We Close the Achievement Gap? (
View Issue Book)
January 31, 2010 Issue: Racial and Ethnic Tensions: What Should We Do? (
View Issue Book)
Forums focus on an issue such as education, immigration, or ethnic and racial tensions. The forums provide a way for people of diverse views and experiences to seek a shared understanding of the problem and to search for common ground for action. Forums are led by trained, neutral moderators, and use an issue discussion guide that frames the issue by presenting the overall problem and then three or four broad approaches to the problem. Forum participants work through the issue by considering each approach; examining what appeals to them or concerns them, and also what the costs, consequences, and trade offs may be that would be incurred in following that approach.
The Minnesota Humanities Center has recently reestablished its role as a
Public Policy Institute (PPI), one of about 40 such groups in the United States. As a PPI we strive to engage students and other community members in deliberative democracy workshops, forums and other activities based on the NIF approach to discussing critical community and national issues.