Doha Debates Asks: Is 'Earned Success' an Illusion?
14.11.2025 - 06:11:11Â
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Doha Debates brings together global thinkers and students for a thought-provoking conversation on whether hard work and talent still determine who rises, or whether âearned successâ conceals deeper inequities. (Photo: AETOSWire)
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Daniel Markovits, Guido Calabresi Professor of Law at Yale Law School, argues that the system meant to promote fairness has instead entrenched inequality. âMeritocracy has become the principal obstacle to equality of opportunity, at least in the rich countries of the world,â he says, warning that competition built on elite education and inherited advantage has replaced real mobility.
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Bryan Caplan, Professor of Economics at George Mason University, offers a contrasting view. âMeritocracy is pretty real if we actually had open borders where anyone could work anywhere,â he says. For Caplan, prosperity depends on personal responsibility and freedom of movement, not structural intervention.
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From a human-centered perspective, Dr. Poornima Luthra, Associate Professor at Copenhagen Business School, challenges the idea that opportunity is equally accessible. âMeritocracy is a belief, a system where people are assumed to have opportunity solely on merit,â she says. âIn reality, people experience bias and discrimination across many aspects of their identity.â
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Offering a global outlook, Parag Khanna, Founder and CEO of AlphaGeo, sees potential in redefining meritocracy. âMeritocracy can work if the most qualified people are making decisions about the shape and direction of society,â he says, citing governance models that reward expertise and mobility.
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Adding their voices, students from universities across Qatar reflect on how these ideas resonate with their generation. Sundus Saeed, 26, a social sciences student at Hamad Bin Khalifa University, says, âThe system often ensures that people stay out, and if someone rises, hurdles are placed in their way to maintain the status quo.â Carl Jambo, 22, studying international economics at Georgetown University in Qatar, takes an opposing view, saying, âMeritocracy gives you the platform to prove yourself, an individual against the world.â
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Filmed in Doha Debatesâ signature Majlis-style format, the debate reflects the platformâs mission to host open, truth-seeking conversations for global audiences, inviting viewers to reconsider what fairness means and how societies can ensure opportunity for all.
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Watch the full episode on DohaDebates.com and the Doha Debates YouTube channel.
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Doha Debates
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Website:DohaDebates.com
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About Doha Debates
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Doha Debates engages a vanguard of intellectually curious truth-seekers to constructively debate differences in order to build a better future. We emphasize unity over division, encouraging conversations that bring us together rather than drive us apart.
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Learn more at DohaDebates.com
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*Source: AETOSWire
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View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251113305464/en/
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