
Watch Frances' Talk on "The Real Crisis"
Watch
Frances' Speech at Porter Square Books, Cambridge, MA
Read 'E' editor on Frances' recent award
Read ‘Planet Earth Reviews’ review of Democracy’s Edge
Watch
Frankie present at the Uplift Academy, Wellesley, MA
Speaking Tour
Sunday, July 27th, 2008, 2:00 PM
Keynote speech and workshop
Kickapoo Country Fair
Organic Valley National Headquarters
One Organic Way
La Farge, WI
Friday, September 5th, 2008, time TBD
Visiting Speaker
Albuquerque Academy
Simms Auditorium
6400 Wyoming Boulevard, NE
Albuquerque, NM
American Independent Business Alliance (AMIBA)
Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE)
Corporate Accountability International
Dow Jones Sustainability World Index (DJSI World)
Institute for Local Self-Reliance
Institute for Local Self-Reliance
National Center for Employee Ownership (NCEO)
National Cooperative Business Association
Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy (POCLAD)
“I’m hooked for life!”
--Pam Emigh, after joining a Pennsylvania citizens’
effort to stop mining companies from degrading the land
Out of sight of most of us, millions of Americans are satisfying
their deep needs for connection with each other and expanding their capacities
for effectiveness in the larger world. They are showing us how democracy
can become more than a set of unapproachable, distant institutions—how
it can become the rewarding way of life I call Living Democracy.
And none too soon!
The indignities and misery of economic insecurity and deepening poverty,
the devastation of our ecological home, and the assault on our basic freedoms
are of such magnitude that the emerging, more powerful practice of democracy
may be our last, best hope.
Chapter One, “The Frame,” challenges prevailing wisdom about
the core crisis facing our nation. Chapter Two, “The Long Arc,”
reminds us of competing currents in our culture’s history that have
taken us to democracy’s edge and points to underrecognized common
ground on which we can now walk to move that edge forward. Chapter Three,
“Power Is Not a Four-Letter Word,” invites us to discard long-held,
stifling assumptions about power, self-interest, and public life and to
embrace liberating alternatives that are already proving effective.
