The Transpartisan Review

Launched on Inauguration Day 2017, the first volume of The Transpartisan Review series invited transpartisan writers, educators, and leaders to share their perspectives on a wide variety of issues and topics.

From Executive Editors A. Lawrence Chickering & James S. Turner

The Transpartisan Review is a digital journal of politics, society, and culture, exploring the apparent disintegration of the traditional political order and the emergence of a new, transpartisan perspective.

The Transpartisan Review, Issue One

The first issue of The Transpartisan Review focuses on a distinct transpartisan moment of change — Inauguration Day 2017 — and the issues dominating so many conversations across the United States. (more details)

Read:  The Transpartisan Review #1 (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

The Transpartisan Review, Issue Two

In the second issue of The Transpartisan Review, we explore how broad ideas and social forces are shaping our political institutions and our choice of leaders, including President Donald Trump. (more details)

Read:  The Transpartisan Review #2 (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

The Transpartisan Review, Issue Three

The third issue of The Transpartisan Review visits the word “transpartisan” with a few of the key figures behind this publication. John Steiner and Joan Blades join the editors in sharing what transpartisan means to them. (more details)

Read:  The Transpartisan Review #3 (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

You can read each in your browser by clicking on its link. If you would like to download the collection to your desktop to read offline or to transfer to another device, right-click on the link and select the download option.

Transpartisan Notes Collection

Begun six years ago on July 4th, 2016, the Transpartisan Notes series continues to explore historical and current issues and themes from a transpartisan perspective.

From the Authors & Editors of the Transpartisan Review

If you are only now discovering A. Lawrence Chickering and Jim S. Turner’s Transpartisan Notes, here’s a chance to read them all at once or download them to your favorite mobile device.

Collection #1:  July – December 2016

Our first collection explores several facets of “transpartisan” through the 2016 election season leading up to President Trump’s inauguration and the release of The Transpartisan Review Issue #1.

Read:  The Transpartisan Notes – Part One (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

Collection #2:  January – June 2017

Collection two tackles a multitude of issues from the first half of 2017 leading up to the release of The Transpartisan Review Issue #2, including a transpartisan moment at the Oscars and a transpartisan look at taxes.

Read:  The Transpartisan Notes – Part Two (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

Collection #3:  July – December 2017

Our third collection expands the conversation through the second half of 2017, sharing stories of transpartisan partnerships in D.C., transpartisan efforts world-wide, and the impact of individuals past and present.

Read:  The Transpartisan Notes – Part Three (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

Collection #4:  January – December 2018

Our latest collection spans all of 2018, exploring many topics including the Winter Olympics in Korea, the Royal Wedding in the UK, the challenges transpartisan has in gaining traction, President Trump’s Korean Summits, and the mid-term election.

Read:  The Transpartisan Notes – Part Four (or Order a Print Version from Blurb)

Transpartisan Notes Omnibus:  2016 -2022

A complete collection of all 150 Transpartisan Notes is in the works and will be available later this year. A complete list, with links, to all  Transpartisan Notes can be found here.

You can read each in your browser by clicking on its link.  If you would like to download the collection to your desktop to read offline or to transfer to another device, right-click on the link and select the download option.

Issue #3 – What Transpartisan Means

We are proud to share the third issue of The Transpartisan Review, a digital journal of politics, society, and culture, exploring the apparent disintegration of the traditional political, social and cultural order from a transpartisan point of view. For this issue, we have reached out to several colleagues, including members of our Advisory Board, to assist us in examining the meaning of the word transpartisan and how this concept shapes the way we engage our communities.

Along with pieces in which our editors share why they call themselves transpartisan, we have included several articles from our community. These articles resonated with a modern transpartisan perspective so much that, as we prepared this issue, they encouraged us to launch a new monthly series of Guest Articles, many of which are shared here.

One article that did not make it into Issue Three due to its length — though certainly tied to this issue’s theme — is John Kesler’s Transpartisan Maturity In Utah, our May 2019 guest article. Although absent from this issue, we encourage you to take a moment to read it for a more expansive look at the impact of transpartisan on a region of the United States.

Download Now:  Transpartisan Review, Issue Three

Order a Print Version:  Blurb Print-on-Demand

You can read this issue in your browser by clicking on its download link. If you would like to download it to your desktop to read offline or to transfer to another device, right-click on the download link and select the download option.

Issue #2 – The Transpartisan Effect

We are proud to share the second issue of The Transpartisan Review, a digital journal of politics, society, and culture, exploring the apparent disintegration of the traditional political, social and cultural order from a transpartisan point of view. We introduce Volume I Issue 2 of The Transpartisan Review as hyper-partisan battles rage. In this issue, we explore how broad ideas and social forces are shaping our political institutions and our choice of leaders, including President Donald Trump.

One strand of the contemporary American narrative holds the current President responsible as the chief cause of the daily chaos in our politics. We contend that the upheaval stems, rather, from deeper social forces, within which the President plays the role of an effect at least as much as that of a cause. We go deeper into our four-quadrant Transpartisan Matrix, suggesting that these driving social forces continue to push people on both the left and the right toward “freedom” and away from “order.” These forces, we believe, reflect the continuing “individuation” of human beings that is characteristic of modern technologically-advanced societies, primarily, but not solely, in the West. Highly individuated people feel increasingly constrained by, disenchanted with, and alienated from highly bureaucratic and centralized economic, political, and cultural institutions.

Download Now: Transpartisan Review, Issue Two

Order a Print Version: Blurb Print-on-Demand

THE TRANSPARTISAN EFFECT

A Note from the Editors, A. Lawrence Chickering and James S. Turner

Today, July 31, 2017 (Day 192 in the presidency of Donald Trump) we welcome you to “The Transpartisan Effect,” an exploration of the remarkable time of change in which we are living. The present is a transitional phase between the extended post-war period of the last century and the emerging world of the 21st. Our unsettled, roiling politics reflects tensions among competing social and cultural forces. These forces push toward deep changes in the relationship between citizens and governments, and toward major reforms in our political institutions. It is a moment of great danger, but also of immense opportunity.

The past 192 days—Donald Trump’s first six months in office—highlight both the dangers and the opportunities of this time of social and political flux. Following through on his campaign promises, the Trump administration is challenging the widely-shared traditional assumptions underlying both the content and the process of making policy, foreign as well as domestic. On international issues, he is moving away from the post-World War II “internationalist” consensus. In the domestic arena, he is reversing longstanding trends in health, education, the environment, and other policy areas. The central theme in both spheres is withdrawal of the state and increasing emphasis on private/individual authority and action.

Apart from his policy agenda, the President’s governing style strains the patience and credulity of all who have come to expect a more “presidential” performance. Yet, perhaps not surprisingly, Mr. Trump appears to have retained the support of many Americans who are deeply alienated from traditional politics. This helps explain why thus far there is scant evidence that the Democrats have yet to benefit from his markedly unconventional behavior.

But making sense of the current turmoil requires appreciating just how weak support for the President actually is. Candidate Trump received electoral support from fewer than 30 percent of eligible voters. The prevailing “narrative” of political news reporting and commenting—that “40 percent” of American voters supported the President—thus greatly exaggerates his real “base.” Significantly, this misleading figure is not unique to Trump; it characterized Obama’s base, and would have misrepresented support for Hillary Clinton’s presidency as well, since the votes actually cast for her represented just 28 percent of the eligible voters.

The electorate’s concerns and priorities, we should note, have changed considerably over the past seventy years as a consequence of unprecedented social and economic conditions. The most important of these changes may be the decline of historically-important sources of adversity—especially major wars and depressions—which invited or required large-scale, centralized solutions. The desire for “order” is never far from the surface of people’s attention. At least three new threats may incite the demand for collective solutions necessary to preserve or restore order. Terrorism, though it inflicts the most damage locally, strikes (as it is intended to) at people’s primal need for safety, security, and predictability.  Extreme and volatile weather might also resurrect collective responses, if predicted effects of climate change turn out to be correct. Individuals and local communities may be overwhelmed and unable to manage without assistance from outside. Finally, as recent developments in North Korea remind us, the threat of nuclear weapons has not gone away—indeed, it may be growing—and it is hard to see how a decentralized response could be effective.

The revolution in technology has propelled new generations into a world that both reflects and demands the continuing individuation of persons.  More than half the population is now under thirty years of age. Instant global communication is more likely to swell the numbers of people demanding the freedom to exercise greater control over their lives than to generate vast constituencies wanting more centralized decision-making.

Even though the earth’s populations seem headed down the path to ever-greater individuation and freedom, “order” (connectedness, community, stability, peace, justice, etc.) remains essential to their happiness. The puzzle of how to construct a new balance between freedom and order in a fast-changing world is already being addressed by people constructing new institutions and practices that emphasize individual self-governance. Successful experiments in public school reform, alcohol and drug rehabilitation, the liberation of women and girls in traditional societies, and similar developments are spreading almost as fast as the news of their effectiveness and popularity.

Several of the articles in this issue address the need for institutional and policy reform in response to the challenges raised by advancing individuation. Our advisor Ralph Benko offers an ingenious suggestion for grass-roots organizing. Edgar Feige revisits his innovative (and, in our view, drastically under-considered) proposal for supplementing or even eliminating income taxes. Jack Matlock, U.S. Ambassador to the U.S.S.R. during the crucial period from 1987 to 1991, offers his thoughts concerning what he views as the distracting preoccupation with Russia’s involvement in the presidential campaign. Pete Peterson, Dean of the Pepperdine University School of Public Policy and 2016 Republican candidate for California Secretary of State, suggests that “while there’s some truth in the contention that the relationship between citizens and government has broken down completely, the fact is that our relationship with government is ‘merely’ changing. That’s a good thing… .” Lynne Twist and Lawry Chickering report on the results of a Living Room Conversation they co-hosted, bringing together three “conservatives” and three “progressives” on a transpartisan journey to imagine how to bring the country together again. (MoveOn.org co-founder Joan Blades founded LRC.)

Finally, we are pleased to note that the Transpartisan Review has been placed in the category rated “least biased” by Media Bias/Fact Check.

[“Least-biased”] sources have minimal bias and use very few loaded words (wording that attempts to influence an audience by using appeal to emotion or stereotypes). The reporting is factual and usually sourced. These are the most credible media sources. …Transpartisan Review (TR), founded by A. Lawrence Chickering and James S. Turner, is an online magazine for the transpartisan political belief. Akin to Third Way politics and centrism in some respects, transpartisan politics eschews a left or right view and promotes cooperation from all sides—left, right, center, etc.—with the goal of finding solutions instead. The articles in TR are factual and well sourced, and the only bias evident is towards the transpartisan belief. (D. Kelley)

We hope you find reading our second issue rewarding, and we look forward to any and all comments you might have.

Read More: The full Transpartisan Effect article can be downloaded here.

Issue #1 – The Transpartisan Moment

We are proud to share the first issue of The Transpartisan Review, a digital journal of politics, society, and culture, exploring the apparent disintegration of the traditional political, social and cultural order from a transpartisan point of view. By choosing Inauguration Day 2017, we hoped to focus on a distinct moment of change — a transpartisan moment — when so many conversations across the United States focused on the future.  A future, for many, in doubt.  Our first issue explores many of the issues dominating these conversations and we encourage our readers to share their own perspective with us, with their friends & family, and, most importantly, with their neighbors.

Download Now: Transpartisan Review, Issue One

Order a Print Version: Blurb Print-on-Demand

THE TRANSPARTISAN MOMENT

A Note from the Editors, A. Lawrence Chickering and James S. Turner

Welcome to the inaugural issue of The Transpartisan Review.

In this Note, we would like to introduce ourselves and the community of individuals, leaders, and organizations who have been collaborating for more than a decade to advocate for transpartisan politics. Below we describe The Review’s ‘core values’, the issues we will address, and our plans for 2017 and beyond.

On election day 2016, nearly half of voting age Americans did not vote, there were more registered Independents than either major party, and the total number who did not vote or voted for a third party nearly matched the number of those who voted for the major party candidates combined. We believe this indicates we’ve arrived at a “transpartisan moment” in history and we would like to explain why.

The “transpartisan moment” refers to our belief that democracy in the United States has reached a turning point in its history. It is a time of change, a transitional phase between the extended post-war period of the last century and the much different world of the 21st. Tensions between competing social and cultural forces have come to a head—or are approaching it—and this is reflected in our unstable political circumstances.

Read more…

FEATURES:

FIGHTING TERRORISM BY EMPOWERING THE POOR

by Hernando de Soto

Becoming internationally famous as the first civil society organization in the world to take on and defeat a violent terrorist organization without weapons but with property rights empowering Peru’s poor, De Soto’s point about ownership is a crucial transpartisan tool for empowering people, especially the disadvantaged and marginalized. In this article, De Soto offers, to our new administration, some lessons from Peru. Read now…

LOVING OUR NEIGHBOR—EVEN WHEN WE DISAGREE

by Joan Blades

Developing understanding, trust, and relationships makes space for greater creativity and generosity when solving problems. But in this time when our conflicts are paralyzing us, we are losing goodwill toward our fellow citizens and failing to address significant issues. Despite thirty years experience as a mediator, the MoveOn.org founder still struggles with this and shares her personal insights with us. Read now…

TRUMP WON. WHAT DO LIBERALS DO NOW?

by Mark Gerzon

When Sean McElwee reviewed Mark Gerzon’s latest book for Yes! Magazine he chose to ignore the distiction between “bipartisan” and “transpartisan”, instead arguing “the solution … to simply ‘get everyone in a room and work it out’ … presumes that politics isn’t fundamentally about power and who wields it.” Mark Gerzon responds in this piece reprinted from the Christian Science Monitor. Read now…

WHOSE PARTY IS IT, ANYWAY?

by Bill Shireman

It used to be that the Republican and Democratic parties competed for the votes of men, women, whites, minorities, church-goers, flag-wavers, environmentalists, and so on. Not anymore. Each voter and issue bloc is now practically owned by one party or the other. In this excerpt from a forthcoming book, Bill Shireman explores this new “monopoly power” and the purpose & mechanisms behind it. Read now…

A POLICY OF CONFLICT, COMPETITION & COOPERATION

by Charles Hauss

Foreign policy analysts are “trained” to think of international relations as proceeding from the ideal of peace to a condition of conflict to a state of war. However, if we embrace a model based on “conflict, cooperation, and competition,” we discover a far more accurate description of the complex nature of international relations, and end up with additional policy options and a new ability to respond creatively. Read now…

ABOUT THE REVIEW

From the Editors

The Transpartisan Review is an online journal of politics, society, and culture that explores new approaches to political issues, reducing conflict and searching for solutions to difficult issues (e.g., public schools, racial conflict, and foreign & security policy). TTR believes the mainstream debate, following social science, focuses too much on governments, ignoring and excluding citizens and private, ‘subjective’ values in solving ‘public’ challenges. These include subjective issues of ‘connection, community, and citizens’ responsibilities in public schools, race relations, and even foreign policy. Finally, TTR will explore religion and spirituality, which are important almost everywhere but ignored in the mainstream debate. -ALC

The Transpartisan Review will offer, online, individual observers, participants and bystanders of our surging political, economic and culture tides, ways to see our world from the underreported place of agreement.   It offers additional, to stated political preferences, possibilities for individuals to see and comment on our divides looking for actual or potential unity. TTR will address and highlight a growing movement of conservative, liberal, independent, green, libertarian and other persuasions joining forces across divisions and disagreements to seek and find creative, often previously unimagined, approaches to current problems and offers analytic, advocacy  and pragmatic tools for supporting or joining this movement. -JST