Southern Register Fall 2006
11/16/06
3:31 PM
Page 1
the THE NEWSLETTER OF THE
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF SOUTHERN CULTURE • FALL 2006
THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI
Future of the South Conference in Little Rock T
he “Communities, Leadership, and the Future of the South” conference in Little Rock on November 1–3, 2006, brought together scholars, government officials, leaders from government and nonprofit organizations, journalists, and others to share ideas and best practices on the South’s social and economic development. Participants heard of the complexities of communities and the need to be inclusive in bringing together diverse community constituents in planning efforts. Panelists insisted on the need for leaders not just to wait for people to come with community development ideas but to go out and create good projects. And after that stage, community leaders need to be aggressive about getting people involved. Participants in the conference heard of ambitious projects such as Southern Bancorp, which combines for-profit banking with nonprofit economic development in the Mississippi Delta. Other projects discussed were smaller ones, such as Sister Maureen Delaney’s work with the Tutwiler Quilters. In general, panelists talked of the need for communities to assess their assets, both internal and external, and then leverage those assets to gain additional funding sources. Katie Snodgrass told of how students from the Clinton School are assisting in the revitalization
In 1963, while he was a senior in high school, Bill Clinton traveled to Washington, D.C., as part of Boys Nation, a special youth leadership conference sponsored by the American Legion. The group was invited to the White House, where young Clinton shook hands with President John F. Kennedy, an event that became one of the most memorable of his youth and which sparked an early interest in entering politics. This historic image was used on the cover of the printed program for the Future of the South meeting at the Clinton Library. CONSOLIDATED NEWS PHOTOS, INC.
of one community, Helena-West Helena, Arkansas. Although many panelists talked of principles of community development in general, there was much discussion
of specific communities, such as Helena. Allen Tullos told of ideas of the Black Belt in Alabama, while Tom (continued on page 5)