John D. Inazu is the Sally D. Danforth Distinguished Professor of Law and Religion at Washington University in St. Louis.
"Confident Pluralism is a reminder that--whatever our preferred
groups and approved politics might be--bracketing disagreements and
building friendships across divides is the essence of 'diversity
work' in our fractious republic."-- "Sojourners"
"Confident Pluralism deserves to be widely read by academic and lay
audiences alike. And as one who upon occasion leads undergraduate
book discussion groups, I highly recommend it for that purpose."--
"Learn Liberty"
"Confident Pluralism is an illuminating account of how the American
experiment, in both law and culture (and the intersections of the
two), might help us foster a modest unity of public goals. Inazu
surveys relevant constitutional doctrines--the right to associate,
the features of the public forum, the vexed legal dimensions of
public funding--with a brevity that also manages to be thorough and
clear. his discussion of civic culture is aspirational and
guardedly optimistic, but not Pollyannaish."-- "Comment
Magazine"
"Confident Pluralism is important both as a theoretical book and as
a practical one. Inazu's unusually thoughtful treatment builds on
theories of pluralism to show how contemporary legal doctrine and
civic engagement can and should put that pluralism into
practice."-- "William Baude, University of Chicago Law School"
"Confident Pluralism makes an important new contribution to our
discussion of pluralism and the public good. While Inazu attends to
important systemic concerns about constitutional law and precedent,
he also rightly recognizes that forging a common life in the midst
of deep directional diversity requires specific dispositions of
tolerance, humility, and patience."
-- "James K. A. Smith, Calvin College"
"Confident Pluralism names the challenge we face as a society that
is made stronger by being more diverse and more dynamic, and weaker
by being more divided and fragmented at the same time. The answer
to that challenge, as Inazu suggests, lies in taking pluralism
seriously and framing a political conversation that focuses on our
successes rather than dwelling on our failures."-- "Yuval Levin,
author of The Fractured Republic"
"Could hardly have been more timely. Confident Pluralism
anticipated a presidential election cycle in which partisans on
both sides would view not just the candidates, but even the voters
who supported them, with nearly unprecedented hostility."--
"Deseret News"
"If a new literature of pluralism emerges in this culture-war
cycle, Confident Pluralism is likely to be one of its key texts.
Inazu's book is blissfully short, clearly written, aimed at
educated general readers rather than academic specialists, and
underwritten by personal experiences that cross standard
culture-war lines. Confident Pluralism is necessary reading for
anyone who is frustrated by the belligerence and inflexibility of
the current discussion and looking for ways for different deeply
held perspectives and tightly knit communities to survive and
thrive."
-- "The University of Chicago Law Review"
"Inazu addresses a question as old as our republic and as current
as protests in Ferguson: with such strongly felt differences, how
can Americans live together as one people? In words both scholarly
and inspiring, he confronts the notion that we serve the good of
the whole when we silence voices of the few. As a law professor, he
argues for stronger legal protections for dissenting groups; as a
concerned citizen, he calls on us to listen to and respect those
with whom we strongly disagree. In this age of rants on social
media and campus speech norms, Inazu shows us the way towards a
more inclusive and tolerant nation. Confident Pluralism is
important reading for our time."-- "John C. Danforth, former United
States senator and former ambassador to the United Nations"
"Inazu's Confident Pluralism is a remarkable book that grabs by the
throat the most profound problem we face: the question of whether
we can live truly with each other, not merely alongside each other,
in situations where we genuinely feel most alienated from, and even
threatened by, one another's beliefs or behaviors. With a good
lawyer's acuity and a committed citizen's painful honestly, Inazu
probes for the places where our differences are most tender--race,
religion, sexuality--and demands that we address those concerns for
what they are. Inazu ultimately hopes--as all our best public
thinkers have hoped--for more from us than just resigned
indifference. The book's real bravery means it will make almost all
of its readers uncomfortable at different points, and its admirable
ambition means that it takes that discomfort as an inevitable, if
unintended, consequence of its aims."-- "Charles Mathewes,
University of Virginia"
"Much of the discourse around diversity these days highlights the
differences that people like. For progressives, this often involves
talk of women, people of color and LGBTQ identities. For
conservatives, religious orthodoxies of varying hues are the
favored subjects. Confident Pluralism unabashedly raises a much
harder, and more interesting, question: how do we think about
diversity when it involves the differences we don't like?"
-- "Eboo Patel, founder and president of Interfaith Youth Core"
"One of the great virtues of Inazu's work is that it attends to
both culture and institutions. Confident Pluralism both prescribes
the kinds of institutional and legal changes that would protect the
groups and associations that make genuine pluralism possible, and
it describes the habits and inclinations that would make those
institutions effective."
-- "Capital Commentary"
"The 2016 presidential election, assuming both Clinton and Trump
are the nominees, may well be the ugliest and most vicious election
many of us will have ever seen. There's no easy or quick way out of
this. It will require some large number of Americans to re-think
how we are to engage in politics in this era of rage and
polarization. Toward that end, Inazu has written Confident
Pluralism. It's so unfashionable, so unrealistic, so out of touch.
It's chic to be cynical. Except for this: Disagreeing with others,
even passionately disagreeing with others, without rhetorically
vaporizing them is actually part of what it means to live as
citizens in a republic. The choice is co-existence with some degree
of mutual respect--or the politics of resentment and disaffection,
the politics of hate and de-humanization."-- "Commentary
Magazine"
"These are not confident times. The stridency of today's rhetoric,
the desperate certitude, and the emotional tribalism of our
politics and public square betray a deep lack of confidence, and
threaten to turn the strength of America's diversity into a
weakness. It is for this reason that Confident Pluralism is right
on time."
-- "Michael Wear, author of Reclaiming Hope"
"We are a nation that has become deaf to the other side, to the
possibility that 'the other' has insights, belief, ideas, or values
worth recognizing and considering. So good for Inazu, in his fine
new book Confident Pluralism, for taking on the issue and beginning
to create a legal framework to understand how we might move the
country back to a place where it was acceptable to disagree and a
public necessity to occasionally entertain the idea that the other
side might have a perspective worth considering."
-- "Ken Stern, former CEO of NPR and president and co-founder of
Palisades Media"
"We need a unity in this country that is not at the expense of our
differences. And that is what Confident Pluralism is about. It's
finding what unites us in order to help us negotiate those deep
divisions over matters that are very important in our lives."--
"Charles C. Haynes, founding director of the Religious Freedom
Center of the Newseum Institute"
"What will it take to create genuinely pluralistic society? That
will start not in the courtroom (though the courts are important)
but primarily in neighborhoods, at the local level. Inazu's
Confident Pluralism shows the way."
-- "Timothy Keller, founding pastor, Redeemer Presbyterian Church"
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