Civil Bonds

What are the fundamental rights and responsibilities of choosing to live in community with other humans? How do human communities collaborate to solve shared problems, and what are the consequences when they fail to do so? Looking to examples across time and around the globe, this cluster considers how communities have adapted to natural, industrial, and economic changes. The courses in this cluster identify examples of community resilience in the face of wars, plagues, and other unrest, as well as occasions when communities have ignored challenges, avoided responsibility, and scapegoated others. Together they seek to understand how to maximize civil bonds and minimize destructive habits of individualism.

This cluster will be offered throughout 2023-25.

Course

HNUH 278B: Democratic Habits

How do ordinary citizens power democracy? At the age of 18, every American citizen is endowed with the right to vote, but what if democracy demands more than voting? With democratic processes seemingly in peril all around us, what can and should ordinary citizens do to safeguard democracy? Looking beyond the basic right to vote, this class will instead explore the complex ecosystem of citizenship practices necessary for collective self-governance. Turning to both philosophy and history, the course material addresses the power and peril of such civic habits as mutual aid, economic participation, tolerance, attention, organizing, protest, and more. We consider what resources these habits require, what virtues they inspire, and what happens when they conflict with each other. Students in this course will acquire the tools to develop and act on their own answer to the pressing question of what it will take to save democracy.

HNUH 278I: Bonded: Loneliness, Health, and Quality of Life

Society has become more and more disconnected, with 61% of Americans reporting being lonely. The U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on the Healing Effects of Social Connection and Community reports that “The mortality impact of being socially disconnected is similar to that caused by smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day, and even greater than that associated with obesity and physical inactivity.” Disconnection is devastating for health and for society. Particularly in a democracy predicated on the health of civic life, which requires interpersonal and community relationships, where does this predicament leave us as a society? This course illuminates the potential root causes of disconnection: early familial relationships, attachment styles, and broader technological trends. Students will leave the course with a toolkit of evidence-based strategies they can use – and share – to help heal these divides and repair our core social connections.

HNUH 278V: Climate Change, Infectious Disease, and Civil Society

Viruses that are lethal to human life have been on earth for centuries. Why are they surging now? And how can we respond to the recent breakneck spread of Coronavirus? This class begins its journey with Homo sapiens, our ancestor that dispersed out of Africa and carried infectious diseases across the planet. Human expansion into new ecosystems also provided opportunities for us to acquire new pathogens. While all of human history is marked by diseases caused by human migration, the Industrial Revolution greatly accelerated human mobility while planting the seeds of the human impact on climate change. Today, the increasingly rapid movement of people and goods, combined with a warming planet and the large-scale disruption of major ecosystems has witnessed an unprecedented spread of infectious diseases. Students will explore how these trends impact our lives and collectively challenge themselves to do what must be done to save our planet and ourselves.

Video Introduction

Faculty Team

Lead Faculty Fellow
Marisa's professional headshot
Associate Fellow
Affiliate Fellow