Philip K. Howard Speaks to the Chautauqua Women's Club
On Saturday, August 21st, Philip K. Howard discussed themes from Life Without Lawyers at the Chautauqua Women’s Club Contemporary Issues Forum. In his talk, Howard planned to address the need for a legislative “spring cleaning” and for “laws that are more purposeful and set boundaries that allow for people’s freedom to act and solve problems.” Click here to read Lori Humphreys’ profile of Howard in the Chautauquan Daily.
August 23, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Philip K. Howard on the Need for a Popular Movement to Revive Individual Responsibility
Recounting a recent conversation, Philip K. Howard writes on his blog on TheAtlantic.com that “America has lost sight of the core principle of freedom—the power of each individual, at every level of responsibility, to make choices that adapt to current goals and circumstances.” He continues that our blindness to this principle—caused by the growth of law—has resulted in doctors practicing defensively, teachers losing control of their classrooms, and government officials being unable to balance budgets. Howard calls for a popular movement to revive individual responsibility, writing that “t’s hard to see any way forward except a new approach to law and government that re-empowers people to grab hold of problems and put their hands to work to solve the challenges of our time.”
July 21, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Dennis McCuistion Interviews Philip K. Howard for KERA Channel 13 in Austin, TX
Over the weekend, McCuistion TV host Dennis McCuistion interviewed Philip K. Howard about the problematic role of litigation in American culture. Video of the segment, which was originally broadcast on KERA Channel 13 in Austin, TX, is now available online:
April 26, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
President Obama Endorses Health Courts
On Tuesday, President Obama issued a letter to congressional leaders in which he proposed appropriating $50 million to states to pilot medical liability alternatives, including special health courts. Developed by Philip K. Howard’s nonprofit legal reform coalition Common Good and the Harvard School of Public Health, with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the health court proposal has been long championed by Howard and Common Good as the best way to bring reliability, efficiency, and fairness to medical justice. Health courts would also reduce the practice of defensive medicine – which adds billions of dollars of waste to the cost of health care – and would provide for the openness needed to improve patient safety.
In a Common Good press release, Howard states: “This is a huge breakthrough. … Special health courts should provide quicker justice to patients injured by mistakes and give physicians confidence that they will not be dragged through years of litigation when they did nothing wrong.”
Howard was also featured in HealthLeaders Media. “I think it’s very important as we build American healthcare,” Howard said an the interview, “to create a reliable system of justice that all parties can trust.”
[Yahoo! News]
[Common Good]
[HealthLeaders Media]
March 04, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
'Four Ways to Fix a Broken Legal System' (TED)
The video of Philip K. Howard’s TED Talk, Four Ways to Fix a Broken Legal System, is now up:
TED Curator Chris Anderson has the following to say about Howard’s talk (via Twitter):
[TED]
[Twitter]
[Huffington Post]
February 22, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Philip K. Howard One of the "Fascinating People You've Never Heard Of"
CNN correspondents John D. Sutter and Richard Galant include Philip K. Howard among the “ten fascinating people you’ve never heard of” from this year’s TED Conference. Dubbing Howard “the anti-lawyer lawyer,” Sutter and Galant report:
A partner in the New York-based law firm Covington & Burling, Philip Howard is a crusader against the excesses of his own profession. Howard, author of “Life Without Lawyers: Liberating Americans from Too Much Law,” gave a blistering talk at TED about how “the land of the free has become a legal minefield.”
He cited the Florida school district that banned running at recess as an example of how “people no longer feel free to act on their best judgment” for fear of getting sued. “People are acting like idiots,” he said. “For law to be a platform for freedom, people have to trust it.”
Howard pushes for policy changes in health care, education and other fields through an organization he founded, Common Good, which describes itself as “a non-profit, non-partisan legal reform coalition dedicated to restoring common sense to America.”
February 16, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Arianna Huffington's Notes From TED: Can Simplicity and Innovation Overcome Complexity and Cynicism?
In her notes on the 2010 TED series, Arianna Huffington gives a rundown of TED curator Chris Anderson’s opening remarks. Huffington states that Anderson “met the zeitgeist head on, talking about his rage at the fact that every idea about how to deal with our big problems is crushed on a wall of cynicism and complexity.” She goes on to quote Anderson’s remarks on Session 11, titled “Simplicity,” for which Philip K. Howard will one of the speakers, this Saturday, February 13. “We are choking ourselves in a web of complexity,” States Anderson in the quote. “Our financial system is so complex it can’t be regulated. The health care plan is so complex no one understands it. Our politics is so complex it’s become a complete mess.” Anderson then gave brief statements about the presenters, including the following about Howard: “‘Philip Howard,’ he said. ‘His talk is an important call to rethink the role of law. The application of our laws has become so perverse, it chokes off innovation.’”
[Huffington Post]
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February 11, 2010 |
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Wall Street Journal Law Blog Q & A with Philip K. Howard, Part 2
As promised, part 2 of Philip K. Howard’s interview with The Wall Street Journal Law Blog’s Ashby Jones.
[Wall Street Journal Law Blog]
February 11, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Wall Street Journal Law Blog Q & A with Philip K. Howard
On Monday, Ashby Jones of the Wall Street Journal Law Blog published part one of his interview with Philip K. Howard. The conversation focused primarily on Life Without Lawyers, which is now available in paperback, using the book as a starting place to discuss the finer points of Howard’s critiques, how they differ from those offered by proponents of traditional reform (such as tort reform), and what practical solutions he offers. Part Two should be forthcoming today.
[Wall Street Journal Law Blog]
February 09, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
VIDEO: Philip K. Howard Delivers Opening Keynote at Georgetown CBPP Event
Below is a video excerpt from the December 4, 2009 event, “Unpacking Customer Satisfaction: The Role of Customer Complaints Across Industries and Agencies,” hosted by the Georgetown Center for Business and Public Policy, in which Philip K. Howard delivers the opening keynote address.
[Georgetown Center for Business and Public Policy]
February 04, 2010 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Life Without Lawyers in Paperback January 31, 2010
Life Without Lawyers: Restoring Responsibility in America will be released in paperback on January 31, 2010. It’s already available for purchase in hardcover and on Amazon Kindle.
Promotional materials to follow.
January 12, 2010 | Comments (1) | Permalink
Fulfilling the Promise: Panel One - What are the Most Promising Alternatives to Fix Healthcare?
Although the entire webcast is archived here, sections of the Common Good forum are now available for viewing. Here is panel one, for which Philip K. Howard was among the speakers:
December 22, 2009 | Comments (0) | Permalink
On December 11, 2009, Philip K. Howard sat down with NPR’s Robert Siegel to discuss medical liability reform as part of the Maxwell School/Public Agenda Policy Breakfast Series.
Watch the video below:
December 17, 2009 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Philip K. Howard Discusses School Discipline at EducationNext
“Strong leadership, respect for authority, and perception of fairness are essential to create a positive, productive school culture,” Philip K. Howard writes in a piece for EducationNext. “And yet the encroachment of due process into daily discipline decisions has undermined all three.” Citing a 2009 study by Richard Arum and Doreet Preiss showing “that the threat of litigation is a real presence in the lives of educators, one that casts a shadow over their decisions,” Howard suggests that educators “reverse course” by re-enforcing the role of teachers as leaders in the classroom, and by fostering a culture that will “encourage all members of the school community to participate in promoting the values and discipline protocols in schools.”
December 15, 2009 | Comments (0) | Permalink
Philip K. Howard in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Health Reform Galaxy Blog
In a posting at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Health Reform Galaxy blog,
Philip K. Howard discusses the value of health courts as a tool not just for reliable justice, but for improved care and cost containment as well. He speculates about the prospects of Congress passing any constructive medical liability reform, such as the Common Good- and Harvard School of Public Health-designed health court proposal. “The good news,” he writes, “is that, whatever happens in Congress with health courts, the Obama Administration has signaled that it wants to fund pilot projects for liability innovations.”
Referencing Common Good’s December 10th forum, “Fulfilling the Promise” – organized with the support of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation – to aid the Administration’s efforts, Howard reminds us that, despite the trial bar’s opposition to reform, “patient safety experts, consumer groups, providers, as well as editorial boards and the public at large, all overwhelmingly support trying to create a reliable foundation of justice.” Howard concludes by paraphrasing Martin Hatlie, President of the Partnership for Patient Safety and a “Fulfilling the Promise” speaker: “the question is not whether healthcare justice will change, but when.”
December 15, 2009 | Comments (0) | Permalink