Demographic Exceptionalism in the United States
Tendencies and Implications

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Wendt Scholar Nicholas Eberstadt
The idea that the American political experiment bears profound significance for all humanity is one rooted deep and long in American soil--it far predates the actual establishment of the United States of America (witness Governor John Winthrop’s famous “city on a hill” sermon in Massachusetts in 1630, nearly a century and a half before the American Revolution). By the same token, the notion that America was characteristically different from all of the societies from which its emigrant populations had been drawn (the “American difference”) was an early and continuing theme of discussion about United States, not only among the revolutionaries who created this independent federalist state in the late Eighteenth Century, but also among discerning observers and well-wishers from the Continent. The concept of “American exceptionalism” was in fact formalized by Alexis de Tocqueville in his opus Democracy in America, after his travels through the USA in the early 1830s.

Nicholas Eberstadt is the Henry Wendt Scholar in political economy at AEI.

About the Author

 

Nicholas
Eberstadt
  • Nicholas Eberstadt, a political economist and a demographer by training, is also a senior adviser to the National Board of Asian Research, a member of the visiting committee at the Harvard School of Public Health, and a member of the Global Leadership Council at the World Economic Forum. He researches and writes extensively on economic development, foreign aid, global health, demographics, and poverty. He is the author of numerous monographs and articles on North and South Korea, East Asia, and countries of the former Soviet Union. His books range from The End of North Korea (AEI Press, 1999) to The Poverty of the Poverty Rate (AEI Press, 2008).

     

  • Phone: 202-862-5825
    Email: eberstadt@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Kelly Matush
    Phone: 202-862-5835
    Email: kelly.matush@aei.org
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