
Intellectual Priorities for a Global Era:
An Initiative of The MacMillan Center
From its genesis in the middle of the last century,
the Center has been the University’s
primary vehicle for encouraging interdisciplinary, area-focused research and
teaching. The constituent councils, committees, centers, and programs have
made tremendous contributions to our understanding of the world, and have
trained generations of scholars. Now, with so many of the world’s most
intractable and immediate problems requiring collaborative, interdisciplinary,
and regionally-expert inquiry, the Center is focusing its activities on the following three substantive areas. These topics are not intended to
be the preserve of, nor exclusive to, any particular academic discipline or
geographic area. Rather, they are intended to complement and draw upon the
existing intellectual and financial resources resident in the Center. One
hallmark of these inquiries will be a conscious emphasis on the global implications
of these topics.
Identity, Security, and Conflict
Religious, national, racial, ethnic, and other
identities are among the most powerful sources of human motivation. They
structure much human conflict, and they are integral to the age-old human
search for meaning and security. Identities have proved more resistant
to the forces of modernization and globalization than many influential
theories predict, and they are not easily accounted for by the dominant
explanatory models in the social sciences. Moreover, their normative dimensions
are complex, because they often live in tension with widely held commitments
to democracy and individual freedom. Nor are the various types of identity
obviously alike, despite the common scholarly tendency to classify them
together. Yale seeks to illuminate identities from multiple disciplinary
perspectives, account for their similarities, differences, and resilience,
and explore their implications for the study of security and conflict—sub-national,
national, and international.
Democracy: Past, Present, and Future
The last quarter of the twentieth century saw
the advent of democracy in more than a third of the world’s countries.
Yet the great majority of the earth’s population continues to be governed
by undemocratic regimes. Moreover, the histories of fascism and communism
remind us that democracy can often be a vulnerable achievement. Some of the
newest democracies have already collapsed; others are creeping toward authoritarianism.
In the older democracies, organized interests, urban blight, and violence
at home and abroad challenge institutional capacities in unprecedented ways.
The very idea of democratic citizenship is hotly contested. Some see it as
a universal right, others as little more than a coveted ticket to membership
in an exclusive club. There is no reason to assume that democracy’s
survival, let alone its spread, is guaranteed. Yale seeks to advance our understanding
of how to create and sustain democracy, how the tensions between democracy
and other goods—notably efficiency and liberty—are best managed,
and how established democracies can renew themselves in the face of internal
and external challenges.
Justice and Distribution: Local, National, Regional,
Global
In an era of unprecedented global integration—of
markets, information, technology, and travel—the political organization
of the world remains centered on nation states. As the main organs of
political accountability and collective enforcement, national governments
remain the central focus of demands for justice and redistribution. Governments
confront many limits to their effectiveness in such a world, but also
profound moral dilemmas. Should international courts and transnational
legislative bodies be strengthened, and, if so, how and at what cost?
To whom will they be accountable? How should demands to reduce inequities
within countries be viewed if the predictable result is to increase inequities
across borders? When public goods like clean air must be provided globally,
how can national governments—often in competition with one another
for power and influence and under massive pressure from private interests—do
the providing and the regulating? Yale seeks to study these moral and
practical dilemmas from multiple disciplinary vantage points.
Implementation
In order to refocus its scholarship as set forth above,
the Center must:
Appoint a number of eminent senior scholars of international
affairs over the next several years. These Professors may be appointed
to any Yale department or school, and in some cases to more than one department
or school. The Professors will be chosen primarily for their record of
achievement and potential to advance scholarship and teaching in the three
subject areas. In addition to their departmental or professional school
affiliation, incumbents of these Professorships will be appointed Professors
of International and Area Studies.
Attract and retain a cadre of junior faculty across a wide range of international disciplines, who teach the bulk of the courses in international topics. Yale’s talented junior faculty are highly desired by other universities, and supporting them in their early career development is the best strategy to keep them here..
Provide resources to enable Yale’s distinguished faculty to pursue the research that will maintain their places at the forefront of their fields. Integral to this mandate is developing courses and projects that involve undergraduate and graduate students in the study of these issues and train them to ask and seek answers from a broad array of sources.
Develop resources that will enable Yale undergraduate, graduate, and professional school students to pursue international independent research projects that will contribute to their own education and that of their peers and professors. We must meet the ever-increasing student demand for year-round opportunities for international research, education, and experience. Enhancing resources for study abroad and graduate fellowship support in these three areas are important priorities.
Convene conferences, symposia, lectures and workshops to bring to Yale the wide range of perspectives relevant to these inquiries.
Publish the results of our explorations in these subject areas, for the benefit of those inside the Yale community and beyond.