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Confident Pluralism: Surviving and Thriving through Deep Difference 1st Edition
In Confident Pluralism, John D. Inazu analyzes the current state of the country, orients the contemporary United States within its broader history, and explores the ways that Americans can—and must—strive to live together peaceably despite our deeply engrained differences. Pluralism is one of the founding creeds of the United States—yet America’s society and legal system continues to face deep, unsolved structural problems in dealing with differing cultural anxieties and differing viewpoints. Inazu not only argues that it is possible to cohabitate peacefully in this country, but also lays out realistic guidelines for our society and legal system to achieve the new American dream through civic practices that value toleration over protest, humility over defensiveness, and persuasion over coercion.
The paperback edition includes a new preface that addresses the election of Donald Trump, the decline in civic discourse after the election, the Nazi march in Charlottesville, and more, this new edition of Confident Pluralism is an essential clarion call during one of the most troubled times in US history. Inazu argues for institutions that can work to bring people together as well as political institutions that will defend the unprotected. Confident Pluralism offers a refreshing argument for how the legal system can protect peoples’ personal beliefs and differences and provides a path forward to a healthier future of tolerance, humility, and patience.
- ISBN-10022636545X
- ISBN-13978-0226365459
- Edition1st
- PublisherUniversity of Chicago Press
- Publication dateMay 12, 2016
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions9.1 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
- Print length176 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"The 2016 presidential election, assuming both Clinton and Trump are the nominees, may well be the ugliest and most vicious election many of us will have ever seen. There’s no easy or quick way out of this. It will require some large number of Americans to re-think how we are to engage in politics in this era of rage and polarization. Toward that end, Inazu has written Confident Pluralism. It’s so unfashionable, so unrealistic, so out of touch. It’s chic to be cynical. Except for this: Disagreeing with others, even passionately disagreeing with others, without rhetorically vaporizing them is actually part of what it means to live as citizens in a republic. The choice is co-existence with some degree of mutual respect—or the politics of resentment and disaffection, the politics of hate and de-humanization." ― Commentary Magazine
"Inazu’s book should be read by all who desire a more civil, thoughtful society than the one in which we find ourselves." ― First Things
"Confident Pluralism is an illuminating account of how the American experiment, in both law and culture (and the intersections of the two), might help us foster a modest unity of public goals. Inazu surveys relevant constitutional doctrines—the right to associate, the features of the public forum, the vexed legal dimensions of public funding—with a brevity that also manages to be thorough and clear. his discussion of civic culture is aspirational and guardedly optimistic, but not Pollyannaish.” ― Comment Magazine
“Inazu has presented an accessible and thoughtful case for pluralism in contemporary America. It will not convince all the skeptics. But perhaps it can start a conversation that will continue in the spirit with which Inazu wrote: confidently putting forward ideas, and considering alternatives with humility, patience, and generosity.” ― The New Rambler
"Inazu's vision is an attractive one, and we would all be better off if our political institutions were less eager to intervene in our associational lives—and if those associational (and private) lives were characterized more by tolerance, humility, and patience.” ― Books & Culture
"Inazu offers an important new consideration of the value of pluralism for American democratic society. Confident pluralism, Inazu explains, is a political solution to the problem of deep and pervasive differences in the electorate. It recognizes difference and even invites it while acknowledging the need for consensus and unity in political life. The end goal of confident pluralism is not to resolve all issues but to allow individuals to function despite their differences. Highly Recommended." ― Choice
"It is abundantly clear that we have become a deeply divided country....This country no longer has one clear majority. Inazu explores the ways Americans can live together peaceably despite these deeply ingrained differences." ― Minneapolis Star Tribune
"This country no longer has one clear majority. Inazu explores the ways Americans can live together peaceably despite these deeply ingrained differences." ― Houston Chronicle
"One of the great virtues of Inazu’s work is that it attends to both culture and institutions. Confident Pluralism both prescribes the kinds of institutional and legal changes that would protect the groups and associations that make genuine pluralism possible, and it describes the habits and inclinations that would make those institutions effective."
― Capital Commentary
"Holding together a diverse nation of strongly held interests has been the great American project since our beginning. Inazu calls us to make it our project today.” ― The Christian Century
"What will it take to create genuinely pluralistic society? That will start not in the courtroom (though the courts are important) but primarily in neighborhoods, at the local level. Inazu’s Confident Pluralism shows the way.”
― Timothy Keller, founding pastor, Redeemer Presbyterian Church
"American society is becoming increasingly diverse. As that happens, the public square becomes a crowded, and sometimes hostile, place. At times it seems there is no longer room for meaningful public debate. Inazu sets forth a framework for public square engagement that allows citizens to live according to their convictions while actively participating in a diverse society." ― Canon & Culture
"We live in divided times—terrifyingly divided times, it sometimes seems....We’ve just concluded one of the ugliest presidential elections in our country’s history, and in a month or so we’ll begin one of the most controversial presidencies, if not the most. How can we navigate a world like this one? [Inazu] wants to offer us a road map of sorts." ― The Christian Humanist
"Could hardly have been more timely. Confident Pluralism anticipated a presidential election cycle in which partisans on both sides would view not just the candidates, but even the voters who supported them, with nearly unprecedented hostility." ― Deseret News
"Inazu has emerged as one of the leading scholars on freedom of association and religious freedom." ― Library of Law & Liberty
"Confident Pluralism is a reminder that—whatever our preferred groups and approved politics might be—bracketing disagreements and building friendships across divides is the essence of 'diversity work' in our fractious republic.” ― Sojourners
"Confident Pluralism deserves to be widely read by academic and lay audiences alike. And as one who upon occasion leads undergraduate book discussion groups, I highly recommend it for that purpose." ― Learn Liberty
"If a new literature of pluralism emerges in this culture-war cycle, Confident Pluralism is likely to be one of its key texts. Inazu’s book is blissfully short, clearly written, aimed at educated general readers rather than academic specialists, and underwritten by personal experiences that cross standard culture-war lines. Confident Pluralism is necessary reading for anyone who is frustrated by the belligerence and inflexibility of the current discussion and looking for ways for different deeply held perspectives and tightly knit communities to survive and thrive.”
― The University of Chicago Law Review
“Inazu addresses a question as old as our republic and as current as protests in Ferguson: with such strongly felt differences, how can Americans live together as one people? In words both scholarly and inspiring, he confronts the notion that we serve the good of the whole when we silence voices of the few. As a law professor, he argues for stronger legal protections for dissenting groups; as a concerned citizen, he calls on us to listen to and respect those with whom we strongly disagree. In this age of rants on social media and campus speech norms, Inazu shows us the way towards a more inclusive and tolerant nation. Confident Pluralism is important reading for our time.” ― John C. Danforth, former United States senator and former ambassador to the United Nations
"Confident Pluralism is important both as a theoretical book and as a practical one. Inazu’s unusually thoughtful treatment builds on theories of pluralism to show how contemporary legal doctrine and civic engagement can and should put that pluralism into practice.” ― William Baude, University of Chicago Law School
"Much of the discourse around diversity these days highlights the differences that people like. For progressives, this often involves talk of women, people of color and LGBTQ identities. For conservatives, religious orthodoxies of varying hues are the favored subjects. Confident Pluralism unabashedly raises a much harder, and more interesting, question: how do we think about diversity when it involves the differences we don’t like?”
― Eboo Patel, founder and president of Interfaith Youth Core
"We are a nation that has become deaf to the other side, to the possibility that 'the other' has insights, belief, ideas, or values worth recognizing and considering. So good for Inazu, in his fine new book Confident Pluralism, for taking on the issue and beginning to create a legal framework to understand how we might move the country back to a place where it was acceptable to disagree and a public necessity to occasionally entertain the idea that the other side might have a perspective worth considering.”
― Ken Stern, former CEO of NPR and president and co-founder of Palisades Media
"These are not confident times. The stridency of today’s rhetoric, the desperate certitude, and the emotional tribalism of our politics and public square betray a deep lack of confidence, and threaten to turn the strength of America’s diversity into a weakness. It is for this reason that Confident Pluralism is right on time.”
― Michael Wear, author of Reclaiming Hope
"Confident Pluralism makes an important new contribution to our discussion of pluralism and the public good. While Inazu attends to important systemic concerns about constitutional law and precedent, he also rightly recognizes that forging a common life in the midst of deep directional diversity requires specific dispositions of tolerance, humility, and patience.”
― James K. A. Smith, Calvin College
“We need a unity in this country that is not at the expense of our differences. And that is what Confident Pluralism is about. It’s finding what unites us in order to help us negotiate those deep divisions over matters that are very important in our lives.” ― Charles C. Haynes, founding director of the Religious Freedom Center of the Newseum Institute
“Confident Pluralism names the challenge we face as a society that is made stronger by being more diverse and more dynamic, and weaker by being more divided and fragmented at the same time. The answer to that challenge, as Inazu suggests, lies in taking pluralism seriously and framing a political conversation that focuses on our successes rather than dwelling on our failures." ― Yuval Levin, author of The Fractured Republic
“Every once in a while, a book comes along that perfectly suits a cultural moment – not by reflecting the prevailing ethos, but by challenging it at the deepest level.” ― Mike Gerson, Washington Post columnist
“Too many people view the freedom to pursue one’s beliefs and associations as important to their own interests, but not for the sake of others. In this timely book, Inazu shows how all people, even those with deep-seated disagreements, can benefit from these freedoms and live together in civil society.” ― Michael W. McConnell, Stanford Law School
“Inazu’s Confident Pluralism is a remarkable book that grabs by the throat the most profound problem we face: the question of whether we can live truly with each other, not merely alongside each other, in situations where we genuinely feel most alienated from, and even threatened by, one another’s beliefs or behaviors. With a good lawyer’s acuity and a committed citizen’s painful honestly, Inazu probes for the places where our differences are most tender—race, religion, sexuality—and demands that we address those concerns for what they are. Inazu ultimately hopes—as all our best public thinkers have hoped—for more from us than just resigned indifference. The book’s real bravery means it will make almost all of its readers uncomfortable at different points, and its admirable ambition means that it takes that discomfort as an inevitable, if unintended, consequence of its aims.” ― Charles Mathewes, University of Virginia
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : University of Chicago Press; 1st edition (May 12, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 176 pages
- ISBN-10 : 022636545X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0226365459
- Item Weight : 14.9 ounces
- Dimensions : 9.1 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #899,728 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #230 in Political History (Books)
- #303 in Jurisprudence (Books)
- #3,637 in History & Theory of Politics
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

John Inazu is the Sally D. Danforth Distinguished Professor of Law and Religion at Washington University in St. Louis. His latest book is Learning to Disagree: The Surprising Path to Navigating Differences with Empathy and Respect.
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Customers find the book's content scholarly yet accessible. They find the author thoughtful, articulate, and persuasive. Readers describe the book as well-researched and worth reading.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's content thoughtful, well-researched, and accessible to a lay audience. They appreciate its thoroughness and its summary in the last chapter. The author provides good ideas for Americans to learn how to work out differences.
"...This has been great in terms of promoting diversity of thought...." Read more
"In John D. Inazu”s Confident Pluralism, the author shares some very good ideas for how Americans can learn how to live together in our ever..." Read more
"...Inazu manages to create a rare and artful balance in his writing: the book is relatively short yet thorough; it’s scholarly yet very accessible to a..." Read more
"...Both halves of the book are summarized well in the last chapter. I found the book tremendously well researched and helpful." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They say it's worth reading, a must-read for Americans, and persuasive.
"This is a remarkably thoughtful, articulate, and persuasive book...." Read more
"...It's well worth the read (particularly given its length), and in modern-day America, it is essential for some version of Inazu's vision to be..." Read more
"Absolutely riveting, brilliantly written and pioneering work, which really help me get a framework into my head about how to think about the..." Read more
"Good book!" Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2022The web, especially social media has given so many more people a voice. This has been great in terms of promoting diversity of thought. It has been terrible as it has seemingly divided us as we come into more contact with positions we abhor. How do we navigate? America, like no other country I know has traditionally been in favor of pluralism and diversity of thought, but our innate human tribalistic tendencies are to suppress dissent of our position. Inazu does a great job of walking through how we might learn to coexist. He proposes and clearly argues for a framework on which perhaps we can preserve the union by focusing on our common ground and perhaps creating a super tribe through our commitment to promoting pluralism and confidently so, the alternative is a nightmare.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2016In John D. Inazu”s Confident Pluralism, the author shares some very good ideas for how Americans can learn how to live together in our ever increasing diverse society. Most of the Left and many on the Right are trying to force their cultural and political beliefs on other Americans. Today, each side of the culture war is guilty of trying to use the powers of the federal government to make everyone else abide by their beliefs. It’s a war against all. If you are concerned about the abundance of hostility that we as Americans are displaying against each other and want to explore ways to be more tolerant of each other, then Inazu’s book is a good place to start. While I suspect that his discussion of constitutional law is on the side of the “Living Constitution” perspective, I believe the original Constitution, as enacted and amended, is a good system for working out our differences. Perhaps our best tool for dealing with the diversity of our nation—Federalism—is not thoroughly explored by Inazu.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2018This is a remarkably thoughtful, articulate, and persuasive book. Inazu manages to create a rare and artful balance in his writing: the book is relatively short yet thorough; it’s scholarly yet very accessible to a layman; it navigates between Constitutional jurisprudence and pop-culture sitcom references with ease. Inazu makes esoteric law concepts very clear to a non-lawyer, yet his argumentation style and word choices reflect all of the compact force of a legally trained mind. I found myself underlining frequently and thinking of more and more people that need to read this book. Both timely and timeless in its applicability, this book is a true gem.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2016This book isn't long, but it's outstanding. It's easy to find despondency with the current state of our government and national conversation (on a whole host of different issues). Inazu doesn't take that route; instead, he focuses on what he terms "confident pluralism," or the idea that while we needn't give up our deeply held views on issues of importance, we must find a way to live together despite those differences. His argument takes two forms. On one hand, he argues that we need a stronger constitutional framework that protects the freedoms of religion, speech, and assembly. Additionally, he argues that we as a society need to embrace attributes that enable conversations and relationships to happen despite deep differences. It's well worth the read (particularly given its length), and in modern-day America, it is essential for some version of Inazu's vision to be realized.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2022I was more interested in individuals dealing with friends and neighbors who differ in their political or religious opinions. World views in conflict. That is primarily covered in the second half of the book. The first half is more on the legal and governmental issues. Both halves of the book are summarized well in the last chapter. I found the book tremendously well researched and helpful.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2024As advertised …
- Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2021As we work through the tensions of our present world and our growing polarization, John Inazu provides some helpful background on where we are right now and some of the constitutional and legal issues that underlie the tensions. I found that it was helpful as more of an explanation of where we are with some prospective responses. The overall mental shift that is needed was the most helpful theme to guide us through learning to disagree with civility.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2016Absolutely riveting, brilliantly written and pioneering work, which really help me get a framework into my head about how to think about the controversies coming thick and fast around discrimination, rights, pluralism and religious liberty





