Democracy Endgame Series
Reshaping American Identity? Race, Class, and Democracy in the United States
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Thursday, December 2, 2021, 12:00PM ET / 9:00AM PT
Register to Join Zoom Webinar
From street protests, to courtrooms, to classrooms, the role that race plays in public life stands among the most important, challenging, and contested issues in the effort to revitalize and protect American democracy. How—and even whether—to talk about race is a fundamental question for political leaders. What role does race play in shaping the threats to democracy in the United States? What are the implications of mobilizing voters around issues relating to race? In his forthcoming essay for the Democracy Endgame series, Ian Haney López addresses these questions and presents his case for a new narrative that redraws the dividing lines in American democratic life.
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Join Protect Democracy on December 2nd at 12:00PM ET / 9:00AM PT for a conversation with Ian Haney López, the Chief Justice Earl Warren Professor of Public Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and Tory Gavito, President and CEO of Way to Win.
This event is open to the public and on-the-record. We invite participants to raise questions during the event, or to submit them beforehand through the Zoom registration.
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Ian Haney López
Chief Justice Earl Warren Professor of Public Law
University of California, Berkeley
@IanHaneyLopez
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Tory Gavito
President and CEO
Way to Win
@torygavito
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Moderator
Jennifer Dresden, Policy Advocate, Protect Democracy
Jennifer Dresden is a policy advocate at Protect Democracy. She was previously a member of the faculty and the Associate Director of the Democracy and Governance Program at Georgetown University. Jen has published and lectured on democratic and authoritarian politics for both academic and policy audiences and has conducted research in the United States and overseas. 
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This event and forthcoming essay are the latest in Protect Democracy’s series The Democracy Endgame: The Grand Strategy Against Authoritarianism in the U.S., which invites the country’s leading scholars to reflect on the strategic questions central to the struggle to protect and perfect American democracy.
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