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The Center annually sponsors lectures on topics related to Communal Studies. The lectures typically take place in the fall and spring semesters on the campus of the 91社区.

Upcoming Events

More coming soon!

Past Events

What is Happening in Your Community?: Why Community Development Matters

Dr. Matt Hanka

Communities are not static or stationary organisms. They are fluid and dynamic and change over time. The role of community development in the change and transformation of a community is critical to improving and enhancing the quality of life of the community and its residents. This book examines how community development changes a community and why that change matters, while also examining the relationship between community development and social capital. When a community improves its social capital, change can happen because people can leverage their networks to produce better results for themselves.聽

Pocket Neighborhoods: Ross Chapin

12:30 p.m. | April 10, 2024|聽 LA 2023

Pocket Neighborhoods have nearby neighbors coming together around a shared commons. These small-scale settings foster a sense of community while preserving personal privacy. Ross Chapin, an architect, community planner and author from Seattle, WA, will offer a presentation on this topic, sharing their origins, key design principles that give them vitality, and show examples across a range of locales. Chapin has pioneered this approach for more than 25 years.

He has designed hundreds of neighborhood plans for community groups and developers across the U.S. and Canada, and has been a development partner on seven pocket neighborhoods, several of which have received national housing awards. His work and ideas have been published in 45 books and numerous publications including the New York Times, USA Today, AARP Bulletin, and Wall Street Journal. His own book has been widely read, shifting the thinking of policy makers, developers, architects, homebuyers and community advocates.

Yoga and the West

April 2022聽

Raghunath Cappo is a founding member of Krishnacore punk bands Youth of Today and Shelter and is a practicing Bhakti Yogi (Hare Krishna) in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition who spent many years as a monk in Vrindaban India before returning to the States. This lecture will cover topics related to Yoga and the West as well as community building in the modern global era through his partnership with Senior Educator of the Bhakti Center of NYC, Kaustubha Das, on their podcast and yoga community, Wisdom of the Sages.

Seeing Like A Commons

3:00 p.m. | October 20, 2022|聽 Kleymeyer Hall聽

In Seeing Like a Commons, Joshua Lockyer demonstrates how a growing group of people have, over the last eighty years, deliberately built Celo Community, a communal settlement on 1,200 acres of commonly owned land in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina. Through the story of the oldest existing non-sectarian intentional community in the United states, Lockyer shows how community members have cultivated the cultural practices and worldviews to become better stewards and citizens of both local landscapes and global commons. Using Elinor Ostrom鈥檚 鈥渃ommons design principles鈥 as a heuristic framework, and acknowledging the hard work and long-term commitment required, he suggests that Celo may offer a rough framework for other groups who may wish to be good commons stewards.

Hippie Family Values

March 2022聽

Hippie Family Values聽is a feature-length documentary about three generations at a back-to-the-land community in rural New Mexico. Shot over a period of ten years at a remote communal ranch,聽Hippie Family Values聽is an intimate chronicle of a handful of hippie elders, along with their adult children and grandkids. The film counters dismissive stereotypes with stories of real people whose worldview was forged in the 60s counterculture, and who remain motivated by those youthful convictions. The founders of this back-to-the-land experiment are slowing down and facing declining health. Will the next generation be able to sustain the community into the future? Fifty years after the Summer of Love, the don鈥檛-trust-anyone-over-30 generation now dotes on their grandchildren and faces the challenges of advancing age. The elders profiled in the film聽continue to defy convention as they pursue communal alternatives to commercial retirement facilities and nursing homes.聽Hippie Family Values won the Grand Festival Award for Documentary at the Berkeley Film Festival,聽the Outstanding Project Award for 2019 from the Communal Studies Association, and the award for the Outstanding Documentary聽Feature at the University Film & Video Association 2018 Annual Conference. The film continues to screen in community and campus venues across the country. This event is sponsored by the 91社区 Center for Communal Studies.

A special thank you to Dr. Casey Harison (former Director of the Center for Communal Studies) for making this lecture possible.

Growing Good: A Beginner's Guide to Cultivating Caring Communities

November 2021聽

Growing Good: A Beginner's Guide to Cultivating Caring Communities shows how ordinary people have transformed themselves into volunteers and activists. Centered mostly in the Midwest, this collection of essays brings together the stories of normal people who have rolled up their sleeves to make their community a better place by serving nonprofits such as Gleaner Food Bank in Indianapolis, Indiana; Migration and Refugee Services in Louisville, Kentucky; and Patchwork Central in Evansville, Indiana, along with national organizations like CASA. For instance, a teacher and his student started a native plant garden to help local insects thrive in a disused corner of their school property. A woman saw a billboard and was moved to become a voice for children in need. A professional photographer offered his services to people experiencing homelessness in order to help others witness their humanity. Editor Bill Hemminger also writes of his own extensive experience with community gardening to feed hungry neighbors.

PRESENTATION AND BOOK SIGNING BY DR. SILVIA RODE (Professor of German & Chair of Department of World Languages & Cultures) -- March 13,聽2019 from 2-3 p.m. in Kleymeyer Hall (LA 0101)

"Utopia Explored:聽George Rapp鈥檚聽Thoughts on the聽Destiny of Man,聽Particularly with聽Reference to the Present Times; by the聽Harmonist Society in聽Indiana.聽A.D. 1824."

Dr. Rode will be available for a book signing:聽George Rapp: Thought on the Destiny of Man, Particularly with Reference to the Present Times by the Harmony Society in Indiana A.D. 1824: A Critical Study (2018)

Laura Johnston Kohl, "Jonestown Survivor 鈥撀燛volution of People's Temple in the 1960s and 1970s" (April 2017)

  • Center for Communal Studies 40th Anniversary Colloquium (October 2016)

  • Jaya Priya Reinhalter, "Kashi Ashram, A Community in Transition: Becoming an Intentional Community after 40 Years" (April 2016)

  • Don Janzen, Exhibit and Talk on Shiloh Community (October 2015)
Graphic for event 'the gazr in U' by artistic group Maidens Artistic Group (Maidens), "Shavasana Project for a Harmonist Farm: Maidens of the Cosmic Body Running, Vibrating the Fabric of Time and Fanning the Glowing Coals of the Ascending Flames of Love in the Play of Wisdom (Dedicated to a Contemplative Society)" (March 2014)
Cover of Issachar Bates: A Shaker's Journey book by Carol Medlicott Carol Medlicott,聽"Branches of One Living Tree: Advancing Shakerism Across the American Frontier" (November 2013)
  • Stephen Zehr, "The Place of Villages in Sustainable Development" (March 2013)


  • Dawn Bakken, "Monroe County鈥檚 Own New Harmony: An Owenite Experiment in 1826 Bloomington, Indiana" (October 2012)
Cover of New Harmony Then & Now book by Donald Pitzer

Donald Pitzer, "New Harmony Then and Now" (March 2012)

  • Don Janzen, "A Photographic Tour of America's Intentional Communities" (April 2009)