Rhonda Phillips, Ph.D., FAICP is a community development and planning specialist. Her first book, Concept Marketing for Communities, profiled towns using innovative branding strategies for arts-based development. She’s presented arts-based development workshops across the US and globally as a Fulbright Scholar and with a US AID project. Rhonda is Professor and Dean, Purdue University and author/editor of 26 books on community development and related topics. She is a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners College of Fellows. Mark A. Brennan is Professor, Leadership and Community Development and UNESCO Chair in Community, Leadership, and Youth Development at the Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Brennan’s teaching, research, writing, and program development concentrate on the role of civic engagement in the youth, community, and rural development process. He has over 25 years’ experience designing, conducting, and analyzing social science research related to community and development. Tingxuan Li is an Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Education at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. Tina earned her Ph.D. in 2019 from the College of Education at Purdue University. At Purdue, she was a key personnel on multiple projects funded by the National Science Foundation as well as a member of Dr. Rhonda Phillips’s research group. Tina was born and raised in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China.
Culture, Community, and Development is an excellent resource for scholars of community development, creative placemaking, and cultural policy. The authors demystify and annotate the deep and fluid relationships among local arts, culture, and community well-being. The book provides a holistic view of current practices and research in this field. -Leonardo Vazquez, AICP/PP, Executive Director, The National Consortium for Creative Placemaking, USA Over the past century, community development and public policy have almost entirely focused on our material lives-with resources flowing to jobs, housing, training, and infrastructure. But, humans also live in a symbolic world-as Clifford Geertz reminds us, 'we are suspended in webs of meaning we ourselves have spun.' Culture, Community, and Development is an indispensable volume for understanding the symbolic dimensions of community development. The editors have woven together theory, empirical research and policy into a compendium that gets at the heart of community change-the role of art, culture, heritage, and local knowledge for building connectivity, identity, cohesion, resilience and civic capacity. -Steven Tepper, Dean and Director, Foundation Professor, Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, Arizona State University, USA