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100 Nat'l Civic Rev. 3 (2011)

handle is hein.journals/natmnr100 and id is 1 raw text is: 

















Since  1912,  the National Civic Review  has been  publishing
thought-provoking articles on the pressing challenges  facing
America's communities.  Over time, the focus of the journal has
evolved from an  emphasis  on fighting corruption and govern-
ment  inefficiency to topics such as community governance, civic
engagement,  and inclusiveness  but the editorial objective has
been the same: to make grassroots democracy work better at the
local level.

We  are celebrating our centennial year, however, by looking for-
ward, not back. We are asking our colleagues, board members,
and leaders of the public, private, and nonprofit sectors to give
us their ideas on what seems to be working in America's com-
munities. Admittedly, that is a very general question, but the
authors in this issue have risen to the occasion with a variety of
perspectives and angles.

NCL  President Gloria Rubio-Cortes writes about the things that
give people hope, finding vivid examples from the stories of past
winners of the All-America City Award. Sandra Freedman,  the
chair of our board of directors, reflects on the years when she
was  mayor of Tampa,  Florida, and the myriad ways she found
to directly engage city dwellers in improving their own com-
munity, everything from home  improvements  to tree trimming
to landscaping. One of these programs was  later written up in
David Osborne  and  Ted  Gaebler's seminal book, Reinventing
Government.

It was an odd experience to be assigning and editing all of these
hopeful articles about communities in late 2010, when political
and economic  trends seemed  to be anything but hopeful. The
country is more deeply divided politically and economically than
at any other period of my lifetime, with the possible exception
of the late 1960s and early 1970s.


A Publication of the National Civic League


There have also been dramatic changes  in media and  technol-
ogy, sure to lead in directions we can only imagine. Some of the
authors and interview subjects in this issue talk about the future
of media and  technology and what it may mean  for democracy
and for nonprofit organizations. Others have narrowed their focus
to particular programs and organizations, illuminating specific
ideas about what they see as working in communities.

Political divisions, dissatisfaction with government, dramatic
changes driven by technology and economic trends   these con-
ditions resemble a little the crisis that was facing cities a hun-
dred years ago, when  this journal was founded to replace the
annual  proceedings of the National Conference  on Good  City
Government.  Many of the proposals, ideas, and models explored
in the journal were ignored by the public, but others were tried,
tested, and adopted and are now taken for granted, things such
as home  rule charters, professional city managers, and merit
systems for public employees.

We  can only hope that the ideas put forward by authors in this
issue and others during the centennial year of NCR will take root
and prove as durable as the municipal reforms of the early twen-
tieth century, which the journal played a historic and important
role in promoting. Through programs  such as the All-America
City Award, we are reminded every day that even under the most
adverse conditions people are working together and finding new
and innovative ways to address the needs of their communities.
We  intend to tell you a lot more about those ideas in the coming
years.

Note: We  would like to thank Philanthropy for Active Civic En-
gagement  for support in publishing this issue of NCR.

                                            Michael  McGrath
                                                       Editor

























                                  0 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
      Published online in Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary.com) I
      National Civic Review * DOI: 10.1002/ncr.20040 * Spring 2011 E 3

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