The Bill of Obligations: The Ten Habits of Good Citizens
The Bill of Obligations: The Ten Habits of Good Citizens book cover

The Bill of Obligations: The Ten Habits of Good Citizens

Hardcover – January 24, 2023

Price
$17.45
Format
Hardcover
Pages
240
Publisher
Penguin Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0525560654
Dimensions
5.73 x 0.96 x 8.53 inches
Weight
14.7 ounces

Description

“Richard Haass has turned his keen mind and large heart to the most important of questions: The meaning of citizenship. If American democracy is to endure, it will require all of us to embrace what Haass calls our common obligations. This is a vital work for a decisive time.”xa0— Jon Meacham, author of And There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln and the American Struggle “Democracy is more than procedures and laws. It is an ethical ideal that requires much of us if it is to succeed. Richard Haass powerfully describes what he calls the Bill of Obligations, commitments and values needed for these challenging times. We may not see eye-to-eye on all the issues, but here I agree: we need a clear and thoughtful statement of our obligations to each other and to the country if this grand and fragile experiment in democracy is to survive. The Bill of Obligations does just that!”— Eddie Glaude, James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor, Princeton University “Americans argue a lot about their rights, but, as Richard Haass reminds us, democracy only works if we also recognize our responsibilities. His newest book reminds us of what those are, providing an indispensable guide to good citizenship in an era of division and rancor.”xa0— Anne Applebaum, author of Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism “In this essential book, Richard Haass calls upon us all to commit anew to the obligations of American citizenship upon which our increasingly faltering American democracy was founded. He rightly observes that the future of this country, if not the world, depends on our answering this clarion call to put patriotic, civic obligation front and center in the national political conversation. This book’s message is desperately needed if we are to bring an end to the poisonous politics eating away at the fabric of our society and begin to mend our tattered nation.”xa0— J. Michael Luttig, former United States Court of Appeals judge “The reasoned arguments [Richard Haass] presents make his eloquent book well worth the read.”xa0— Booklist “Readers of every political stripe would benefit from hearing out these well-reasoned arguments.”xa0— Kirkus “Haass provides a clear roadmap for a concerned citizenry. While the book’s intended audience are American citizens, his ten obligations can apply to the citizens of any liberal democracy. This is a timely read and call to action for all citizens regardless of political party affiliation. In writing this book, Haass starts an important and necessary conversation for the future of American democracy. ” — Journal of International Social Studies “Richard Haass has written a lucid and convincing case for placing the obligations of citizens on the same footing as their rights.” — PoliticsHome Dr. Richard Haass is president of the nonpartisan Council on Foreign Relations. An experienced diplomat and policymaker, he served in the Pentagon, State Department, and White House under four presidents, Democrat and Republican alike. A recipient of the Presidential Citizens Medal, the State Department’s Distinguished Honor Award, and the Tipperary International Peace Award, he is the author or editor of fifteen other books, including the bestselling The World: A Brief Introduction , A World in Disarray , and Foreign Policy Begins at Home. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PREFACEI have spent my career studying, practicing, writing about, and speaking on American foreign policy, and a question I frequently hear is “Richard, what keeps you up at night?” Often, evenbefore I get to answer, the person posing the question suggests potential answers. Is it China? Russia? North Korea? Iran? Terrorism? Climate change? Cyberattacks? Another pandemic? In recent years I started responding in a way that surprised me and many in the room. The most urgent and significant threat to American security and stability stems not from abroad but from within, from political divisions that for only the second time in U.S. history have raised questions about the future of American democracy and even the United States itself. These divisions also make it near impossible for the United States to address many of its economic, social, and political problems or to realize its potential. Many Americans (for a range of reasons) share my concern; according to a recent poll, a plurality (21 percent) believe that “threats to democracy” is the most important issue facing the country, surpassing cost of living, the economy, immigration,and climate change.The deterioration of our democracy also has adverse consequences for our country’s ability to contend with Russian aggression, a much more capable and assertive China, and a host of other regional and global challenges. Deep political divisions make it difficult—or even impossible—to design and implement a steady foreign policy at a time when what happens in the world deeply affects what happens at home. Similarly, a country at war with itself cannot set an example that people elsewhere will want to emulate. If democracy fails here, democracy will be endangered everywhere. The storming of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, along with other attempts to overturn a free and fair election, made clear America’s internal divisions had reached a qualitatively different and dangerous level. There is overwhelming evidence that members of Congress as well as the then president of the United States and his close associates were not only aware of what was being planned but were intimately involved. And even though Inauguration Day took place two weeks later, even though American democracy proved resilient, the outcome might have been different had it not been for the courage and character of a few state officials, Capitol police, and the serving vice president. It was a close‑run thing—much too close for comfort.What is more, the threat to American democracy is not limited to those who stormed the Capitol or the elected officials who cheered them on. An equally serious threat stems from the slow but steady erosion of popular support for democracy’s underpinnings.Before going on, I should perhaps say a few things about my‑self and what motivated me to write this book. I am not particularly partisan. I have worked for one Democratic senator, one Democratic president, and three Republican presidents. I began my political odyssey as a liberal Democrat, someone opposed to the war in Vietnam. My ideas began to change when I did my graduate work at Oxford in the 1970s, during which time I studied more history, read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s powerful denunciations of the Soviet system, and watched up close the illiberalism of the British Labour Party and the rise of a principled Margaret Thatcher. For most of my adult life I was a registered Republican, although in the summer of 2020 I reluctantly concluded I was no longer comfortable in that party and changed to no party affiliation. But even when I was a Republican I would at times vote for Democrats. Party was never as important to me as individual candidates and issues. As I write this, I serve as the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, an institution dedicated to beingxa0a nonpartisan resource for Americans across the political spectrum on questions of U.S. foreign policy and the country’s relationship with the world.In short, what led to this book is not my political preferences.I am motivated by what keeps me up at night: our democracy isxa0imperiled, and its demise would be an incalculable loss to thisxa0country’s citizens and to the world. My belief is that it can besaved only if Americans across the political spectrum come toxa0accept that citizenship involves more than their asserting—orxa0the government’s protecting—what they understand to be theirrights.I have come around to the view that our very concept of citizenship needs to be revised, or better yet expanded, if Americanxa0democracy is to survive. As two leading political scientists wrotexa0in a classic study, “The development of a stable and effective democratic government depends upon more than the structures ofxa0government and politics: it depends upon the orientations thatxa0people have to the political process—upon the political culture.”xa0Yes, respect for individual rights remains basic to the functioningxa0of this or any democracy, but rights alone do not a successful democracy make. A democracy that concerns itself only with protecting and advancing individual rights will find itself in jeopardy,xa0as rights will come into conflict with one another. When theyxa0inevitably do, it is essential that there is a path for citizens toxa0compromise or a willingness to coexist peacefully and work withxa0those with whom they disagree.Beyond rights, obligations are the other cornerstone of a successful democracy—obligations between individual citizens asxa0well as between citizens and their government. Obligations—akinto what Danielle Allen calls “habits of citizenship”—are thingsxa0that should happen but that the law cannot require. Without a culture of obligation coexisting alongside a commitment to rights,xa0American democracy could well come undone. We need nothingxa0less than a “Bill of Obligations” to guide how we teach, understand, and conduct our politics.I write in full awareness that I have long been associated with the establishment—people and institutions that have often been vilified and blamed for the failures of democracy. Some of these criticisms are well‑founded. The purpose of this book is not to defend the past. It is to help build our common future, to remind readers why democracy should be cherished and suggest what could be done to preserve it. What fills these pages is a mixture of reflection and advocacy, written out of aspiration. Implicit in all this is the conviction that American democ‑ racy is most decidedly worth keeping. The American experiment has with one obvious exception managed to sort out its differences without experiencing civil conflict on a large scale. This worthy experiment has been a sanctuary for tens of millions of immigrants fleeing persecution or seeking opportunity, and a safe harbor for political expression and religious freedom. Our nation is also an engine of innovation, creating unprecedented wealth for hundreds of millions of people and increasing average life expectancy by decades for its citizens. Beyond its borders, the United States proved central to defeating fascism in World War II, navigating a Cold War that ended peacefully and on terms largely consistent with American interests and values, and fashioning a world order that for all its flaws ended the colonial era and built international arrangements that have brought greater prosperity, freedom, and health to literally billions of people.Yet American democracy has also come up short in meaningful ways. There is an enormous gap between the words of the Declaration of Independence—“that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”— and reality, including but not limited to the treatment of Native Americans and the institution of slavery and the status of women. This country has failed to adequately deal with discrimination based on race, gender, religion, or country of origin. Equal opportunity for many has been a hope rather than a reality. Nor has the country always lived up to its stated values and principles abroad, frequently supporting leaders who showed little fidelity to democratic values or the rule of law. But progress—slow and winding—has been made over the decades toward America fulfilling its promise. The hard‑fought passage of the Thirteenth through Fifteenth, as well as the Nineteenth, Amendments to the Constitution, civil rights legislation, the legalization of same‑sex marriage—all demonstrate that this country has an ability to recognize and correct mistakes and introduce political reform and policy change. This is anotherxa0built‑in advantage of democracies. Certainly more must be done, but as Winston Churchill put it, “No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all‑wise. Indeed it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried.” The stakes for the United States and its approximately 330 million citizens are difficult to exaggerate. Inability to come to agreement on policies to strengthen American democracy has the potential to disrupt the economy and society alike. Essential public services could deteriorate or break down entirely. Political rights taken for granted could be suspended or compromised. Violence on a large scale, be it by ordinary criminals or those with a political agenda, the latter meeting the definition of terrorism, has become all too imaginable. And although an overwhelming majority of Americans oppose it, attempted secession from the union by one or more states cannot be dismissed out of hand.Moreover, what is at stake does not end at the water’s edge, at the country’s borders. A United States that is divided and de‑ fined by politics will be in no condition to set an example that others will want to emulate. This was a theme central to President Jimmy Carter’s inaugural address: “Our nation can be strong abroad only if it is strong at home. And we know that the best way to enhance freedom in other lands is to demonstrate here that our democratic system is worthy of emulation.” The perceived failure of American democracy to function and deliverxa0provides an opportunity for authoritarian regimes to justify their repression of their own citizens and others. In order to deter would‑be foes and provide security to friends and allies, Ameri‑ cans must be able to come together across partisan divides. Our current political atmosphere is a recipe for diminished U.S. influence, the expansion of Chinese and Russian sway, the proliferation of nuclear weapons, and increased conflict in the world. As I argued in a book published nearly a decade ago, foreign policy begins at home. After January 6, Chinese television was filled with images of the violence and disarray at the Capitol. This is instructive. China and its government‑dominated authoritarian model would likely be the principal beneficiaries if democracy here were to fail. Those who purport to be tough on China are being anything but if they weaken democracy here in the United States. Similarly, a country paralyzed by internal divisions will be in no condition to help shape international responses to global challenges that could de‑ fine this century, including but not limited to infectious disease, climate change, the spread of nuclear weapons, and terrorism. All of this would come at great cost to Americans and to others, as little stays local for long in a globalized world.The question is whether we the people will meet these challenges. My goal is to see that we do. My assessment is that doing so is essential, as democracy cannot otherwise be preserved. Part One of this book begins with a discussion of how rights came to occupy so central a place in American democracy and goes on toxa0examine the mounting evidence that this rights‑based democracy is failing. Part Two of the book sets out ten obligations that, if adopted by a preponderance of citizens, would go a long way toward fixing American democracy. Putting these obligations into practice, however, is up to us. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • New York Times
  • BestsellerA provocative guide to how we must reenvision citizenship if American democracy is to survive
  • The United States faces dangerous threats from Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, terrorists, climate change, and future pandemics. The greatest peril to the country, however, comes not from abroad but from within, from none other than ourselves. The question facing us is whether we are prepared to do what is necessary to save our democracy.
  • The Bill of Obligations
  • is a bold call for change. In these pages,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Richard Haass argues that the very idea of citizenship must be revised and expanded. The Bill of Rights is at the center of our Constitution, yet our most intractable conflicts often emerge from contrasting views as to what our rights ought to be. As former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer pointed out, “Many of our cases, the most difficult ones, are not about right versus wrong. They are about right versus right.” The lesson is clear: rights alone cannot provide the basis for a functioning, much less flourishing, democracy.But there is a cure: to place obligations on the same footing as rights. The ten obligations that Haass introduces here are essential for healing our divisions and safeguarding the country’s future. These obligations reenvision what it means to be an American citizen. They are not a burden but rather commitments that we make to fellow citizens and to the government to uphold democracy and counter the growing apathy, anger, selfishness, division, disinformation, and violence that threaten us all. Through an expert blend of civics, history, and political analysis, this book illuminates how Americans can rediscover and recover the attitudes and behaviors that have contributed so much to this country’s success over the centuries.As Richard Haass argues, “We get the government and the country we deserve. Getting the one we need, however, is up to us.”
  • The Bill of Obligations
  • gives citizens across the political spectrum a plan of action to achieve it.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Expensive Book

I predict this is excellent, but as a book considered critical to the survival of democracy, it is priced WAY too high at $28. Price it at $12, and I'll buy one for every gift I need for a year, AND I'll take down this review.
61 people found this helpful
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Hey Costco...make this available to your in-store shoppers. Please!

Every citizen of this country very much needs to read this book. Our democracy is on shaky ground and it's up to us, each one of us, to do our part to help patch the cracks that have formed and restore its strength and vibrancy. This book will inspire you to join in.
11 people found this helpful
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Disappointed

Amazon' "Look Inside" neglected to show the table of contents. Here are the Bill of Obligations - Ten Habits of Good Citizens

1. Be Informed
2. Get involved
3. Stay open to compromise
4. Remain Civil
5. Reject violence
6. Value norms
7. Promote the common good
8. Respect government service
9. Support the teaching of civics
10. Put country first

I was disappointed as the +200 pages lacked the authoritative rigor one would expect from this author.
5 people found this helpful
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Excellent analysis to save American Democracy

This short but excellent book provides recommendations on how to save American democracy. It lists the obligations of American citizens necessary to do that. Unfortunately those who need to read this book will not do so either because they don’t read or because it was written by an “elite”.
This book should be mandatory at the high school level as it promotes civics.
5 people found this helpful
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print is small

hard to read print is really small
1 people found this helpful
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Knowledgeable

A great read
1 people found this helpful
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Disappointing

I was looking forward to this book . I think the premise that we do need a Bill of Obligations and (civic education ) in the USA is true. However this book is not that insightful nor helpful. There is no deep work done in it on how we could instill these obligations or structure them in society. Very disappointing.
1 people found this helpful
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An important stimulus to our national conversation.

This is a clear-headed look at what is wrong today in our polity and how it might be remedied. Haass reminds us citizenship is not just "rights" but obligations as well-and without both, we are in trouble.
1 people found this helpful
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Great Bullet Points, Lacking any depth on Action and Substance

Great Title for the Book because it got me to buy the book. Great Bullet Points on what "The Ten Habits of Good Citizens" are. But the support for the habits and any perspective on actions to take is lacking. Plus, I read the book and he takes jabs wherever he finds room to attack Trump and even at the end Joe Rogan/Spotify. He chooses his own set of 'facts' (stories) which he wants to believe, and he uses it to set-up attacks on how one should be better (as he states -- be like Liz Cheney). Never are their arguments using the opposite party. I got through the book, its a quick read, good intentions. If you can get for a few bucks may be worth it, but not for $28.
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Memorize and Repeat these 10 Ideas

“The ten habits of good citizens.” With rights go responsibilities, and this book is an outline of the most important ones. Do more than read them. Pass them along to your children and grandchildren.

Be Informed - Understand the fundamentals of government, the economy and society. Read widely. Understand the difference between facts, assessments, predictions and recommendations.

Get Involved - Voting is the most basic act of citizenship. Democracy cannot be a spectator sport. Passivity and opting out simply allows others to chose for you.

Stay Open to Compromise - Henry Clay said “all legislation, all government, all society is founded on the principle of mutual concession.” Ronald Reagan said “if you get 75 or 80 percent of what you were asking for, I say, you take it and fight for the rest later.” Decide on what is fundamental, and get that. You can’t say everything is fundamental.

Remain Civil - “Civility is not a tactic or sentiment; it is the determined choice of trust over cynicism, of community over chaos (GW Bush). It is impossible to find common ground on issues when the issue is the other person’s motives, character or intelligence. Justice Scalia said “I attack ideas, not people.”
Reject Violence - Violence means forfeiting the high ground and having the message lost among the mayhem. Free speech is protected but not an absolute. Calling for imminent lawless action is not protected.

Value Norms - Law are not norms. Norms are unwritten traditions, customs, conventions, codes of conduct and practices that reduce friction. Democracy requires more than laws to function. Observation of norms is necessary, and will happen only if citizens insist on it.

Promote the Common Good - “Am I my brother’s and sister’s keeper?” What affects one affects all. Individual liberty stops when it harms someone else. Fairness is central to the peaceful functioning of society.

Respect Government Service - Fear of government inspired the Bill of Rights. The reaction to flawed government should be better government. Civil servants are paid with respect as much or more than money, and we expect them to use their best judgment. More widespread national service would expose young people to government and break down animosity to its role.

Support the Teaching of Civics - No people should assume that their history and their heritage is widely known or automatically handed down. Collective identity is a matter of teaching. Only eight States and DC require a full year of civics classes. Many Americans know little about their own political system and few teachers are qualified to teach the subject. Agreeing on the content and making a high school civics course mandatory should be a high priority.

Put Country First - What is required is an abundance of character, formerly known as virtue. This cannot be mandated or legislated. It can be encouraged because it is right or moral or ethical. Think institutionally - beyond the immediate issue at hand - long term what is best for the institution. Opposition must be loyal to the law and the success of the country, grounded in policy and principle, not politics.