The research university and educational system reframed as strategic national assets — not domestic policy problems but institutional infrastructure whose quality determines both the nation's capacity for democratic self-governance and its international soft-power projection.
Education as strategic infrastructure is this book's argument that educational institutions must be analyzed as strategic national assets rather than as domestic policy problems. Nye spent four decades arguing that American universities projected extraordinary soft power by attracting the world's brightest students, training the researchers who produced breakthrough innovations, and generating institutional networks whose alumni carried institutional values into every institution they subsequently joined. The AI transformation threatens this strategic asset in ways that educational institutions have been slow to recognize. The threat is structural: AI is making the core value proposition of the research university — transmission of expert knowledge and certification of competence — less relevant to the economy graduates are supposed to enter. The failure to reform is therefore not merely a domestic policy failure but a strategic vulnerability.
Education as Strategic Infrastructure
In The You On AI Field Guide
Education contributes to national power through four distinct channels. The first is human capital formation: producing a workforce