Introduction: Carol McNamara and Trevor Shelley
Part I: Diagnosis of the American Malady
Chapter 1: We All Live on Campus Now: Andrew Sullivan
Chapter 2: The Constitution of Knowledge: Jonathan Rauch
Chapter 3: Renewing Civic Education: How to Restore Strategic Competence and Confidence: H.R. McMaster
Part II: Meritocracy, Racial Challenges, and the Populist Response
Chapter 4: Meritocracy, Populism and Worker Power: Michael Lind
Chapter 5: The Inescapable Meritocracy: Rita Koganzon
Chapter 6 Systemic Racism: Defining Terms and Evaluating Evidence: Lara Bazelon
Chapter 7: On the Persistence of Racial Inequality in America: Glenn Loury
Part III: The Case for Liberal Ideas and Institutions
Chapter 8: The Three Pillars of Liberalism: Michael Zuckert
Chapter 9: Truth and Virtue in the Founders’ Liberalism: C. Bradley Thompson
Chapter 10: Conservative Democracy Rightly and Wrongly Understood: Daniel Mahoney
Part IV: A Civic Compact for Our Digital Age
Chapter 11: Beyond Information Idolatry: A Civic Compact for a Technoscientific Age: J. Benjamin Hurlbut
Chapter 12: Social Media and The Prestige Economy Trap: Buying Allies, Losing Friends, and the Audience Effect: Pamela Paresky
Chapter 13: Steamboat or Showboat? Space, Wealth, and the American Way: Charles Rubin
Part V: Cultivating Our Civic Vocation and Contributing to the Common Good
Chapter 14: Empowering the Rising Generation to Overcome the Victimhood Narrative: Ian Rowe
Chapter 15: Civics at Work: Defending Democratic Institutions: Suzanne Spaulding
Part VI: Civic Friendship
Chapter 16: Civic Friendship: Lessons from Aristotle: Michael Pakaluk
Chapter 17: Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln: Neighborly Citizens of a Common Country: Diana Schaub
Chapter 18: How Civic Friendship is a Fact not an Ideal, and How it Explains Our Present Moment: Paul Ludwig