ABSTRACT

The theme of Daniel Yankelovich's Zetterberg Lecture is timely and urgent: how do societies learn? We know that individuals can learn, but can collectivities do likewise? More specifically, how can complex political systems adapt to a changing world? Yankelovich focuses specifically on the severe problems of the different attempts to treat welfare in the United States and Sweden.  What kind of strategies can be attempted to accommodate these systems to the economic forces of globalization? Yankelovich answers by citing a version of trial and error in human affairs, a process of "lurch and learn." Yankelovich suggests that future changes in welfare systems will have to rely on mechanisms of reciprocity, rather than the claims of specific interest groups.  Sociologist and public opinion analyst, Daniel Yankelovich is co-founder with Cyrus Vance and current president of the Public Agenda, a nonpartisan, nonprofit public opinion research and citizenship education organization based in New York City. He is a past chairman of the board of Transaction. This is the first of the Hans L. Zetterberg Lecture Series delivered at the City University of Stockholm in 1997.

chapter 1|4 pages

To the well-being of society

chapter 2|4 pages

The global market economy

chapter 3|4 pages

Promise and peril

chapter 4|7 pages

The American response

chapter 5|5 pages

The Swedish welfare state

chapter 6|4 pages

Social learning

chapter 7|4 pages

Lurch and learn

chapter 9|7 pages

Characteristics of the lurch

chapter 10|5 pages

Reciprocity