Does America promote its most capable people — or its most advantaged?
That question sits at the center of American life, yet it is almost never examined with the rigor it deserves. We argue about it in admissions offices, boardrooms, and election cycles — but rarely stop to ask what merit actually means, who gets to define it, and whether the systems built to reward it are doing what they claim.
ON THE BASIS OF MERIT takes on that question directly. Part philosophical inquiry, part evidence-based investigation, this book traces the idea of merit from Plato and Confucius through the Enlightenment and into the meritocracy debates sparked by Michael Young and reignited by Michael Sandel — then tests that history against the hard data of contemporary American life. Dr. Dwayne Dyce does not argue that merit is a myth. He argues something more demanding: that merit is real and matters enormously, and that it has been so inconsistently defined and unevenly applied that the word itself has become a battleground — invoked by every side of the political spectrum to defend conclusions already reached.
A GLOBAL INVESTIGATION
Drawing on research from more than a dozen countries, the book asks what genuine meritocracy requires by examining the places that have come closest to building it: Singapore's scholarship-linked civil service, Germany's apprenticeship system, Finland's equitable schools, Brazil's racial quotas, South Africa's empowerment legislation, Israel's startup-nation meritocracy, and the persistent class ceiling beneath Britain's formally meritocratic institutions. Each case sharpens the same hard truth: meritocracy is not a default condition. It is a structural achievement that must be built, audited, and defended.
THE AMERICAN RECKONING
The book turns that international lens back on the United States with unflinching specificity — tracing how race, class, gender, disability, religion, and geography quietly filter who gets to compete in the first place. It examines the GI Bill's hidden exclusions, resume callback studies, the motherhood penalty, stereotype threat, credential inflation, and the algorithmic hiring tools now encoding yesterday's discrimination into tomorrow's decisions. It follows the politics of merit through the affirmative action debate, the populist backlash against the "expert class," Silicon Valley's self-mythology, and the corporate DEI retreat.
A PATH FORWARD
What separates this book from a familiar genre of grievance or defense is its turn toward construction. Drawing on blind-audition research and organizational psychology, Dr. Dyce lays out five concrete principles for building institutions where merit can actually be measured fairly, from skills-based hiring to a national mentorship corps to a public meritocracy index that would finally let Americans see, rather than argue about, whether their institutions deliver on their promise.
WHY THIS BOOK MATTERS NOW
Dr. Dyce writes not as a distant theorist but as a practitioner with nearly two decades as a teacher, school leader, and nonprofit founder. That firsthand vantage gives this argument a grounded, lived authority that purely academic treatments often lack. For educators wrestling with equity in their classrooms. For professionals who have wondered whether the ladder they're climbing is as level as they were told. For anyone exhausted by a debate that generates more heat than light — ON THE BASIS OF MERIT offers an argument rigorous enough to survive scrutiny from every direction, and honest enough to leave no one entirely comfortable.
The question of whether America rewards its best is not a left question or a right question. It is a question of institutional integrity.
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