- The Great Immigrants comic series illustrates the inspiring
contributions of naturalized citizens to their
communities
- The Secret of Life of Librarians tells the stories of ten
exceptional librarians who were selected for the 2024 I Love My
Librarian Award
- Former Washington Post editor Martin Baron makes the
case for objective, investigative, and local journalism as
essential safeguards of our democracy
- Andrew Carnegie Fellow and political scientist Joshua P.
Darr explains his research on the connection between local news
and reducing political polarization
- Utah Governor Spencer J. Cox (R), Maryland Governor Wes
Moore (D), and journalist Judy Woodruff talk about how to
“disagree better”
As national politics become increasingly polarized, local
communities across the country continue to uphold democratic values
through civic participation and service. The Summer 2024 edition of
Carnegie Reporter magazine looks at what we can learn from these
local efforts and explores what can be done to support and
replicate them.
This press release features multimedia. View
the full release here:
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The cover of the Summer 2024 edition of
Carnegie Reporter magazine. (Graphic: Business Wire)
In this issue, the philanthropic foundation Carnegie Corporation
of New York focuses on reducing political polarization by exploring
the work of librarians, educators, journalists, national service
members, naturalized citizens, and other civic leaders who are
forging ties within their local communities and strengthening our
democracy. The magazine includes insights from experts including
leadership at the foundation, grantees, academics, and frontline
practitioners on effective local initiatives, the challenges they
face, and how to overcome them.
For the first time, the magazine includes original comics about
naturalized citizens who have been honored by the Corporation’s
annual Great Immigrants tribute. Every Fourth of July since 2006,
the foundation has celebrated the extraordinary contributions of
immigrants to American life, and this year it commissioned the
creative storytelling studio Jongsma + O’Neill and illustrator
Chuan Ming Ong to tell their immigrant stories. The magazine
includes comics they produced in collaboration with three Great
Immigrants: humanitarian Betty Kwan Chinn, educator Jean-Claude
Brizard, and Maria Elena “Mel” Lagomasino, a trustee of the
Corporation and 2010 honoree.
“In this issue of the Carnegie Reporter, we are focusing on the
role of local leaders and the importance of our communities in
strengthening democracy at a time of growing polarization,” says
Dame Louise Richardson, president of the foundation. “We at
Carnegie Corporation of New York are working to identify and
support these leaders as they endeavor to rebuild the forces of
social cohesion in our society. In this issue, you will read about
some of these remarkable women and men.”
Among the articles:
The Great Immigrants Comic Series
To highlight the extraordinary contributions of immigrants to
American life, the Corporation commissioned a new comic series to
illustrate how naturalized citizens are contributing to communities
across the country. The three Great Immigrants featured in the
issue include Betty Kwan Chinn, a humanitarian who survived
childhood homelessness and has devoted her life to helping those in
need. “Inside my heart, I don’t want anyone to suffer what I
suffered,” Chinn says.
The Secret of Life of Librarians
In a small, rural Arkansas town, the local library is meeting
residents’ everyday needs. Through a “Library of Things,” librarian
Clare Graham lends items from kitchen appliances to power washers.
At the Queens Public Library in New York City, Fred Gitner and his
team offer multilingual workshops guiding recent immigrants toward
vital services such as health care and legal advice. These are
among the little-known stories explored in the Secret Life of
Librarians series that takes us to libraries nationwide to learn
about civic leaders who are improving lives and drawing communities
together.
The Case for Objective, Investigative, and Local
Journalism
In an excerpt from his best-selling book, Martin Baron, the
former editor of the Washington Post and a trustee of the
Corporation writes that without democracy, there will be no
independent press, and without an independent press, there can be
no democracy. “We should not start our work by imagining we have
the answers; we need to seek them out. We must be generous
listeners and eager learners. We should be fair. And by that, I
include being fair to the public: report directly and fearlessly
what we find to be fact.”
Does Local News Reduce Polarization?
Local news is in crisis: more than half of American counties are
now without access or have very limited access to local news.
Political scientist and Andrew Carnegie Fellow Joshua P. Darr has
been studying what the loss of local news means for American
communities. In a Q & A, Darr writes: “When local media
disappears, nonpartisan identity weakens, and divisive national
news fills the void. But more and better local news has been shown
to improve the civic life of communities.”
How to Disagree Better
Journalist and former Corporation trustee Judy Woodruff
moderates a conversation with Spencer J. Cox, Governor of Utah (R),
and Wes Moore, Governor of Maryland (D), about how to depolarize
our country, the role that national service can play, and how to
disagree better. “We need to recognize our differences instead of
dehumanizing and attacking,” Cox says. Moore agrees: “We have to
remember the historical contexts of the evolution of this country,
of the evolution of our states. And I think if we do that and we’re
willing to do what those who came before us did, which is go do the
work and not just simply give up or retreat, then I think we are
guiding ourselves to a better place.”
Additional highlights:
Inside a High-Poverty School District’s Exceptional
Postpandemic Rebound
Across the country, students suffered historic learning losses
after COVID-19 shuttered classrooms. The impacts were especially
felt in poor school districts like Alabama’s Birmingham City Public
Schools. Yet since the pandemic, Birmingham has achieved one of the
country’s most dramatic academic recoveries, according to new
research by Harvard and Stanford scholars with support from the
Corporation. How did Birmingham succeed, and what can other
districts learn from it?
How do Foreign Policy Decisions Affect Local U.S.
Communities?
Four in 10 U.S. adults think foreign policy issues should be a
top priority for the United States government in 2024, according to
an AP-NORC poll — double the number reported in 2023. We invited
five Carnegie Corporation of New York grantees — experts in the
field of international peace and security whose foreign policy
projects look at domestic impact — to explain how foreign policy
decisions hit home for communities across the country.
For more information, visit the online issue of the Carnegie
Reporter. Subscribe to receive the print version of the magazine
and the foundation’s newsletters — these resources are always
free.
The Reporter has been the flagship “magazine of ideas” for
Carnegie Corporation of New York for more than two decades,
assessing emerging trends and urgent challenges and offering ideas
to inspire informed action. Readers are encouraged to republish or
excerpt articles by seeking permission from the foundation.
About Carnegie Corporation of New York
Carnegie Corporation of New York was established by Andrew
Carnegie in 1911 to promote the advancement and diffusion of
knowledge and understanding. Today the foundation works to reduce
political polarization through philanthropic support for the issues
that Carnegie considered most important: education, democracy, and
peace. @CarnegieCorp
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Celeste Ford | Carnegie Corporation of New York | Chief
Communications Officer CFC@carnegie.org