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The End of the American Dream?

Although the recession is officially over, recent jobs reports, stock market volatility, and other news indicate continued struggles and heightened insecurity for nearly all demographic groups:

Is this the end of the American Dream? That is, the end of the idea that you will succeed if you just work hard enough? The facts: Americans are less economically mobile than individuals in other nations, and this dream has never been equally attainable by all. Stories of individuals and communities overcoming long odds to reach great achievements still exist, just as they always have. But now, with rising insecurity putting more people who never thought that they wouldn’t succeed at risk—of medical crisis and bankruptcy, of job loss and foreclosure, of underemployment—it is clearer that hard work is not necessarily a guarantee of anything.

America—its society, culture, and economy—and the world are changing. Technology and globalization are dramatically re-organizing the structure of everything, from social interaction to the economy, in ways that are exhilarating, terrifying, and overwhelming. There are no easy solutions or quick fixes to the challenges facing individuals and their families, communities, and the nation. But, if the tales of rising insecurity across social and class boundaries tell us anything, it is that we are all in this together. And maybe we, collectively, can chart a path towards a new future and a re-imagined dream.