San Diego Union-Tribune

FORUM LOOKS AT DEMOCRACY IN AGE OF DISTRUST

Zoom event offered by USD Joan B. Kroc peace studies school

- BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN deborah.sullivan@ sduniontri­bune.com

As trust in American institutio­ns declines, citizens must consider new ways to effect change, three academics said in a panel discussion on “Democracy of All” Thursday night.

The conversati­on was one of a series of Zoom events presented by University of San Diego’s Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies. Moderated by San Diego Union-Tribune Publisher and Editor-inChief Jeff Light, the panel considered how to solve the big problems facing democracy.

“If you polled the American populace in the mid-1960s, three out of four of Americans will say they trust the government,” said Ethan Zuckerman, an associate professor of public policy communicat­ion and informatio­n at University of Massachuse­tts Amherst. “If you poll Americans now, fewer than one in five will tell you they trust the government.”

That mistrust, which took root starting in the 1970s, extends to other major institutio­ns, such as universiti­es, newspapers, churches and corporatio­ns, with the exception of the military, he said. Students who are anxious about the future and eager to improve their world are losing hope about their ability to do so through establishe­d channels, such as voting and organizing, he said.

“At a moment while it feels like all our institutio­ns are failing us, going to students and saying, ‘It’s fine, organize for a candidate and vote, even go out in the streets and protest, and maybe you’ll persuade your political leaders to behave somewhat differentl­y,’ those promises ring somewhat hollow,” he said.

Graduate student and activist Nikayla Jefferson described her dismay at seeing California’s environmen­t eroding amid climate change.

“I’ve lived in California my whole life, and over the past 24 years, how this state has transforme­d for the worst,” said Jefferson, a writer with the Sunrise Movement. “The wildfire and the droughts and the sea level rise. I’m a backpacker, and high Sierras feel like a second home to me, and every time I leave I wonder will I be able to come back. The climate crisis is deeply, deeply personal to me.”

That crisis is intertwine­d with threats to civil rights, Jefferson said. She described a drive home from a backpackin­g trip amid wildfires and observing “orange skies, ash falling like rain on my windshield, but also being absolutely terrified of being pulled over by the Highway Patrol, because I’m brown, and I have curly hair.”

She said she became committed to organizing after concluding that by the time she finished a Ph.D. in environmen­tal policy years from now, there would be little left of the environmen­t to save.

The perception of failing institutio­ns amid a tumultuous period should be placed in perspectiv­e, however, said Patricia Márquez, dean of the Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies at the USD. Unlike her native Venezuela, which she described as a true failed state, many parts of American democracy and government still function as expected.

“There are still a lot of things that work, and it’s important we don’t lose faith, and leverage those things to create trust,” Márquez said.

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