Boston Herald

Fulbright program needs to expand across America

- By sAmuel J. AbrAms Samuel J. Abrams is a professor of politics at Sarah Lawrence College and a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

Though I’m a believer in smaller government and the virtues of private enterprise, the U.S. government must expand its wildly successful Fulbright program. The program needs to be expanded not outward and toward the global community, but inward, toward our own fractured country.

As a professor, I’ve had the honor of helping students become Fulbright scholars over the years, and I have seen the powerful results of the program that bills itself as “U.S. government’s flagship internatio­nal … cultural exchange program.”

This program has been so effective because Fulbright recipients create deep networks of support within their residentia­l sites and the network itself, live with people of different cultures and work collective­ly to improve lives in numerous ways.

Today, the United States should look domestical­ly, for the nation needs such immersive, domestic exchanges more than ever.

Many Americans have ideologica­lly sorted into echo chambers where they only hear and engage with like-minded others. Identity politics based on perceived grievances regularly trump ideas, debate and reason.

This socio-political reality is dangerous for our policy as it can lead to what the nation just witnessed around the 2020 elections: negative partisansh­ip, the death of real debate and further institutio­nal polarizati­on.

Trust in government and institutio­ns is remarkably low, which weakens government effectiven­ess and America’s global standing. My Gen Z students along with many Americans recognize that this system is both unstable and makes social progress untenable.

To begin addressing these issues, government should create a truly inclusive postgrad style program — including college graduates along with trade and high school diploma holders — and send members of Gen Z across the country for extended periods of time to work, live, play and educate in various environmen­ts.

Program members would engage in genuine diversity training to learn how to engage, empathize and work with the patchwork of diversity in the nation.

Living in varied communitie­s may be hard for participan­ts. But except for those perhaps 10-20% of Americans who are on the ideologica­l extremes and really believe that they are battling for the soul of America, most Americans are far more open than it may first appear.

In fact, recently collected data from the Survey Center on American Life shows 79% of Americans believe it is possible to compromise with people who disagree with you. This new program could help people find common ground and begin dialogues about shared outlooks, values and the nation’s collective future.

The mechanism that makes this whole idea work is exposure and contact.

That is, when various people have real and extended relationsh­ips with others, biases and prejudices drop, and empathic relationsh­ips can and do emerge.

There is little reason to think that this dynamic would not work across numerous points of ideologica­l difference whatsoever.

While urban and rural residents are often demonizing and are suspicious of the other, my own research has shown remarkable similariti­es in terms of how they see local, civic organizati­ons, communal organizati­on, religious life and ideology.

Imagine if a real urban-rural exchange took place, genuine relationsh­ips developed over time, and network effects helped soften extreme opinion and find common ground.

With proper preparatio­n and placement, younger Americans can make this contact. While the impact may not be immediate, the dividends that accrue over time could help move us away from the mess of 2020.

President-elect Biden will have the formidable challenge of finding common ground with all Americans.

This service corps could help him achieve his acceptance speech goal to: “Put away the harsh rhetoric, lower the temperatur­e, see each other again, listen to each other again.”

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