In the midst of a global pandemic, historic and controversial events related to race and inequality, divisive elections, and deepening polarization, it would be an understatement to say that democracy faces significant challenges.
The inaugural event, hosted by the University of Virginia’s Miller Center of Public Affairs, the Karsh Institute of Democracy and the College of Arts & Sciences’ Democracy Initiative, will be held later this week to look at both the current state, as well as the future, of democracy.
The Democracy Biennial will consist of from Friday, Sept. 24, through Saturday, Sept. 25. The biennial will be held virtually and is currently open for registration.
UVA Today caught up with Melody Barnes, executive director of the Karsh Institute of Democracy and co-director of the Democracy Initiative, and Bill Antholis, director of the Miller Center, to discuss the upcoming event.
Q. What inspired the Democracy Biennial?
Antholis: Its origins go back two years to the Presidential Ideas Festival, or PrezFest, which we did as a celebration of 鶹ƽ Bicentennial. The Miller Center studies the presidency and we wanted to explore some of the big issues being discussed in the presidency. But the University was founded by a president, with the help and support of two other presidents, James Madison and James Monroe. And so, we wanted to expand the scope to include all the different schools and centers that focus on democracy.
As a result, we all learned that we can work well together, which was the driving theme that President Jim Ryan leaned into in the opening remarks at PrezFest, where he called for a new Institute of Democracy. And in many ways the Democracy Biennial is the first embodiment of the new Karsh Institute of Democracy, which President Ryan envisioned back in May 2019.
Barnes: I think of two things. One, the Miller Center hosted the really successful Presidential Ideas Festival two years ago and there was so much excitement about that, and both leveraging the faculty and administration and students, and all the talent that exists at UVA, along with the national and international policymakers and practitioners and scholars that we brought from beyond Grounds here to engage in that conversation. There were debates, there were differences of opinion, but that I think was really energizing to people.
At the same time, when the was launched, it was launched with the idea that we would start to host these kinds of convenings and create those kinds of opportunities to focus on the challenges facing democracy.
So there were a couple of things happening at the same time that led to the biennial that we’ll be hosting this weekend.
Q. Can you explain for UVA Today readers what the Miller Center, the Karsh Institute of Democracy, and others do and how they work together?
Antholis: There are a handful of really great research centers and institutes and initiatives at UVA on themes of democracy, most of which come either out of the schools of the University like the College of Arts and Sciences or the Law School or the Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy or freestanding centers like the Miller Center and Larry Sabato’s Center for Politics and the Weldon Cooper Center. And the Karsh Institute was designed to bring all of us together and to both coordinate activities across these areas where we might have opportunities to collaborate with one another, as well as to plan big public gatherings, like this one.