Connect with civic-minded changemakers and leaders from across Alabama for a daylong discussion about our state’s past, present, and future.
As we celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the David Mathews Center, the theme for the 2025 Civic Institute is drawn from Dr. Mathews' 2021 book Together: Building Better, Stronger Communities. Participants will each receive a copy of the book and other resources.
Our speakers will highlight what's working in their communities, discuss strategies for addressing persistent challenges, and offer perspectives on the enduring importance of working together. Participants will learn about meaningful efforts to mark the 250 anniversary of the founding of the United States. They will hear how participation in the Mathews Center’s college internship program helped shape the careers and perspectives of dynamic young professionals. And they will be encouraged by leaders from across the state who will discuss challenges and successes in their communities. Dr. David Mathews will offer his own thoughtful perspective in a recorded message.
Our keynote will feature two Alabama lawmakers who understand well the importance of dialogue across differences. Earlier this year, Representative Ginny Shaver (R – Leesburg) and Senator Vivian Davis Figures (D – Mobile) secured passage of a bill providing paid parental leave to state employees. They will discuss what it takes to secure such a bipartisan victory in the State House and, more broadly, why working together in our communities is so vital.
Breakfast and lunch will be provided.
Agenda & Speakers
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8:30AM
Jonathan Cellon, Ph.D., Air Force Global College
Col. Alan Miller, American Village Citizenship Trust
Scotty Kirkland, David Mathews Center for Civic Life
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9:00AM
The Institute begins with a panel of people working in the fields of education, economics, humanities, and the law who will discuss some of the “wicked problems” confronting Alabama today. Dr. Mathews would define a wicked problem as one that is “as tricky as it is aggressive.” Wicked problems cannot be fixed in a day, or a year. They require effort by as many dedicated people as possible, working together to address them. “Strategies for countering these problems have to engage citizens from every sector of the community because the problems have multiple sources,” Mathews says in Together.
Moderator: Jim Byard, Byard Associates, LLC
Chandra Scott, Alabama Possible
Chuck Holmes, Alabama Humanities Alliance
Joe Sumners, Ph.D., Auburn University's Government and Economic Development Institute, emeritus
Michael Waters, Alabama Citizens for Constitutional Reform
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10:30AM
“What your community will be in the future will be determined by the way it makes decisions going forward,” Dr. Mathews writes in Together. This panel assembles a large group of diverse Alabamians working in the fields of housing, public health, sustainable agriculture, local government, and more who will discuss ways their organizations are answering the question Can Citizens Really Make a Difference with an emphatic YES!
Moderator: Mark Wilson, Ph.D., Auburn University
Theoangelo Perkins, Wallace Center for Arts & Reconciliation
Herman Lehman, Keys to the City Community Coaching
Danny Patterson, Gulf States Health Policy Center
Russell & Jewel Bean, S & B Farm
Ethan Brown, English Classroom
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12:00PM
Marsha Folsom, David Mathews Center for Civic Life, presiding
Jean O’Connor-Synder Award Recognition
Keynote Address by Sen. Vivian Davis Figures & Rep. Ginny Shaver, moderated by Todd Stacy, Alabama Public Television
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1:45PM Concurrent Session
Step into a powerful and inspiring panel discussion featuring former interns of the Jean O’Connor-Snyder Internship Program, a program dedicated to empowering younger generations through immersive civic engagement. Discover alongside JOIP Alumni firsthand how this transformative internship experience became a launchpad for lifelong leadership, advocacy, and active participation.
Moderator: Lauren Lockhart, David Mathews Center for Civic Life
Rev. Marian Royston, St. Paul United Methodist Church
Jeffrey Rogers, Maynard Nexsen
Madi Duboise, Walker Area Community Foundation
Chauntina Whittle, David Mathews Center for Civic Life
Cristin Brawner, National Issues Forums Institute
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1:45PM Concurrent Session
Stories become history in the Jean O’Connor-Snyder Internship Programs represented on this panel. From Mobile's “Down the Bay” community to Troy and Montevallo, discover how faculty and interns ensure that community voices are not forgotten, but heard, shared, and preserved as living history. Through podcasts and social media campaigns, these oral histories create a bridge across generations, offering lessons and lifelong advice from the past to those in the present and future.
Moderator: David Dada, University of Alabama at Birmingham
David Messenger, Ph.D., University of South Alabama
Lauren Cochran, Troy University
Jayden McQueen, Troy University
Kathy King, Ph.D., Montevallo Legacy Project
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2:50PM
A message from Dr. David Mathews

