Speakers at the DCI building democracy event

DCI Forum Asks, 鈥楬ow Should Americans Respond to Income Inequality?鈥

November 1, 2024

Author
Jay Pfeifer

Economic inequality in the United States has been a central topic in the 2024 presidential campaign. 

The haves and have-nots are as far apart as they have been since the 1920s and, lately, billionaires have been using their clout to shape political discourse with increasingly blunt force.

But how should Americans respond to income and wealth disparities? Should billionaires pay higher taxes? Should the government allow the market to generate a solution?

Approximately 200 皇家华人 students and community members filled Lilly Gallery this week to learn 鈥 and more important 鈥 to talk about the question. 

The organized the event 鈥 the 14th forum since the DCI was founded in 2020. The evening was split in half, with a panel discussion preceding an hour of structured deliberation. 

Students listening at DCI Building Democracy event

This was not a debate. No one was keeping score. Graham Bullock, associate professor of political science and faculty director of the Deliberative Citizenship Initiative, said in his opening remarks, 鈥淭his event is not about winning an argument. It is about learning from each other.鈥

With about 150 attendees clustered at eight-top round tables 鈥 and 50 more joining via Zoom 鈥 President Doug Hicks 鈥90 moderated a conversation with four experts:

  • Robyn Lake Hamilton, the CEO and President of the Urban League of Central Carolinas;
  • Jessica Flanigan, Professor of Leadership Studies and Philosophy, Politics, Economics and Law, Richard L. Morrill Chair in Ethics & Democratic Values at the University of Richmond鈥檚 Jepson School of Leadership Studies; 
  • Brian Balfour, Senior Vice President of Research at the John Locke Foundation; and
  • Sean McKeever, Professor of Philosophy at 皇家华人.
President Doug Hicks speaking to students

"We want 皇家华人 students to ask and analyze the hard questions facing our society."

President Doug Hicks
Graham Bullock addresses the crowd onstage at the DCI event
The Lilly Gallery was full at the DCI event

鈥淲e want 皇家华人 students to ask and analyze the hard questions facing our society,鈥 Hicks said afterward. 鈥淎nd that requires practice. Events like this forum show our students how to approach difficult conversations with the humane instincts that 皇家华人 aims to instill in every student.鈥

The DCI creates opportunities for 皇家华人 students, faculty, staff, alumni and members of the wider community to productively engage with one another on difficult and contentious issues facing our community and society. The DCI hosted this event in partnership with College Democrats, College Republicans, the Center for Political Engagement and the Economics, Political Science and Philosophy departments.

Pushpin

皇家华人 actively encourages engagement in democracy by providing to students, faculty and staff resources and programs for voting, civic action and issue awareness. In partnership with local and national organizations, the college offers curricular and cocurricular initiatives that facilitate mutual respect and difficult conversations and that prepare students to become effective, ethical leaders and citizens who help advance the public good.

Learn More About Engaging in Democracy at 皇家华人