
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Author and political scientist Yuval Levin of the American Enterprise Institute talks about his book A Time to Build with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Levin argues that institutions in America are less trustworthy than they have been in the past. The cause, in Levin's view, is that the participants in these institutions no longer see the institution they are part of as something that molds them and has norms to which the participants conform. Instead, participants view the institution as a platform to gain attention and notoriety. This in turn means that institutions are increasingly unable to perform their primary function as they once did. The conversation concludes with some ideas for how individuals might change how they see their roles within institutions and life as a way of working together in common purpose.
By Russ Roberts4.7
41934,193 ratings
Author and political scientist Yuval Levin of the American Enterprise Institute talks about his book A Time to Build with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Levin argues that institutions in America are less trustworthy than they have been in the past. The cause, in Levin's view, is that the participants in these institutions no longer see the institution they are part of as something that molds them and has norms to which the participants conform. Instead, participants view the institution as a platform to gain attention and notoriety. This in turn means that institutions are increasingly unable to perform their primary function as they once did. The conversation concludes with some ideas for how individuals might change how they see their roles within institutions and life as a way of working together in common purpose.

967 Listeners

2,442 Listeners

2,289 Listeners

384 Listeners

1,512 Listeners

77 Listeners

989 Listeners

901 Listeners

479 Listeners

22 Listeners

6,590 Listeners

130 Listeners

2,031 Listeners

31 Listeners

729 Listeners

689 Listeners

502 Listeners

831 Listeners

8,756 Listeners

149 Listeners

96 Listeners