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2025 CDS Annual Conference
July 6-9, 2025 - Geneva, NY
Theme: Innovative Pathways for Thriving Communities
Sub-themes: Technological Integration, People-Driven Solutions, Place-Based Collaboration
To Register CLICK HERE
Type: Technological Integration clear filter
Tuesday, July 8
 

8:30am EDT

Trends and Opportunities in Community Development Research: Insights for Emerging and Established Scholars
Tuesday July 8, 2025 8:30am - 9:45am EDT
High-Level Description (100 Words)
This session explores emerging trends in community development (CD) and local development and society (LD&S) research, focusing on innovations in practice, technology, and scholarship. Featuring insights from CDS journals, we’ll discuss critical themes shaping the field, including the role of emerging technologies like AI, strategies for enhancing community resilience, and equitable development. The session also provides practical tips on preparing standout submissions for our journals, emphasizing ways to bridge the gap between research, policy, and practice. This interactive discussion invites scholars, practitioners, and policymakers to reflect on current trends and share strategies for advancing impactful community development research.
Expanded Description (250 Words)
This session highlights the latest trends and critical discussions in community development (CD) and local development and society (LD&S) research and practice, drawing on insights from CDS journals. Aligning with the 2025 conference theme, “Innovative Pathways to Thriving Communities,” the presentation examines evolving topics that are reshaping the field, such as resilience building, equitable urban and rural development, and the integration of emerging technologies.
While artificial intelligence (AI) will be a focal point in exploring how technology intersects with community development, the session will also cover other transformative tools, frameworks, and opportunities. These innovations are positioned alongside established community development models, fostering a conversation about blending tradition and technology to address contemporary challenges.
The session will include practical advice for researchers and practitioners aiming to publish their work in CDS journals, offering insights into crafting impactful submissions that resonate with editors, reviewers, and the broader academic and practitioner communities. We will discuss strategies for aligning research with critical themes, ensuring methodological rigor, and addressing the broader implications of findings for community practice and policy.
Attendees will have the opportunity to engage in an interactive dialogue with editors, gain clarity on navigating the submission process, and reflect on how their work contributes to emerging conversations in CD and LD&S. Whether new to the field or an experienced scholar, this session promises to inspire and equip participants to advance impactful research and practice.



Speakers
avatar for Craig Talmage

Craig Talmage

Associate Professor of Business Management and Entrepreneurship, Community Development (Journal)
CDS memberCommunity Development Editor
NW

Norman Walzer

Local Development & Society (Journal)
RP

Rhonda Phillips

Local Development & Society (Journal)
SK

Sofia Kotsiri

CD & LDS (Journals)
Tuesday July 8, 2025 8:30am - 9:45am EDT
Stern Hall - Room 301
 
Wednesday, July 9
 

9:30am EDT

Rural America in the 2020s: Shocks, Stressors, and Successes Relevant to Community Development
Wednesday July 9, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Overview/Description
Rural America has faced numerous shocks (global pandemic, natural disasters, overdose crisis) and long-term stressors (population aging, globalization, industrial transformation, infrastructure decay, climate change). These experiences have implications for rural population change (fertility, health and mortality, migration), wellbeing, and vitality. Understanding these patterns will be critical for informing community development practice and policy for the future. This panel brings together select authors contributing to a forthcoming book, bringing together insights relevant to community development. The session begins with an overview of the project and how the work can help inform community development practice. This is followed with thematic panel presentations.

How the academic panel relates to the Theme and Tracks
This proposed academic panel relates to the Community Development Society conference theme in that it provides a summative research-based assessment of major characteristics and trends influencing rural America coupled with the implications for shaping policy and practice. Major sectors of importance to household and community wellbeing are addressed, including rural industries and livelihoods, housing, and digital infrastructure and use. Further attention is directed to local government responses to the shocks, stressors, and opportunities confronting rural communities. With insights from these presentations and subsequent discussion, session attendees will be able to conceptualize innovative approaches to community development, especially concerning place-based cross-sectoral collaboration.

(Note that there is an organizer/moderator for this session. There was not a place in the online form to place that information.)

Academic Panel Papers

Rural Industries and Livelihoods
A sizable rural-urban economic divide has developed since the 2000s, and it will likely continue through the 2020s. One can summarize the rural economy as a tale of “the west and the rest”. The rural west faces challenges of rapid economic growth, while the rest of rural America faces stagnation.

Rural Housing Landscapes
This presentation explores the ways in which demographic, economic, and climatic forces stress rural housing landscapes. With case examples focusing on the Wildland Urban Interface, population aging, and the financialization of rural housing, the contribution highlights spatial variations as well as differences across scale.

Digital Infrastructure and Use
The concept of the digital divide has been in place since the mid-1990s. It has evolved over time, given complexity and nuance. This presentation provides a brief history of the term, several indicators to define it, and its implications for rural communities. Particular attention is given to digital parity.

Local Governments and Policy Responses
This presentation highlights rural local governments and their policies in the context of stressors, shocks, and opportunities. A conceptual framework is advanced on the role of local governments in influencing spatial inequality and areas for future research and open questions about the role of rural local governments are identified.
Speakers
JG

John Green

Southern Rural Development Center/Mississippi State University
DP

David Peters

Iowa State University
avatar for Roberto Gallardo

Roberto Gallardo

Director, Purdue University
Roberto Gallardo is Assistant Director of the Purdue Center for Regional Development and a Purdue Extension Community & Regional Economics Specialist. He holds an electronics engineering undergraduate degree, a master's in economic development, and a Ph.D. in Public Policy and Administration... Read More →
PK

Paige Kelly

Pennsylvania State University
Wednesday July 9, 2025 9:30am - 10:45am EDT
Stern Hall - Room 201
 

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