Meet Our Team
RESEARCH
STUDIES
- Taylor, Keith, and Nathan P. Goodman. 2019. “The Stakeholder-Empowering Philanthropy of Edward Filene.” Journal of Institutional Economics: 1–15. https://www.cambridge.org/core/article/stakeholderempowering-philanthropy-of-edward-filene/EEAEE4073EA0914E0DE0E9CF23F37280.
- Taylor, Keith. 2021. “An Analysis of the Entrepreneurial Institutional Ecosystems Supporting the Development of Hybrid Organizations: The Development of Cooperatives in the U.S.” Journal of Environmental Management 286: 112244. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301479721003066 (March 11, 2021).
Policy Briefs
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Practitioner Takeaways
Infographics
Education
- Understanding Economic Development Policies and Practices
- Innovating Community Economic Development
- Aligning Our CED Values with Business Development: Embracing a Triple Bottom Line Strategy
- Strategizing Around Entrepreneurial Support Systems for Triple Bottom Line Firms
- Philanthropy, State Assistance, and Leveraging Existing Community-Based Enterprise
- Capturing Wind Energy Development for Community Economic Development Impact
- Why Is There a Digital Divide?
- Overcoming The Digital Divide
- How to Start a Community Broadband Entity: Learning from the Electric Co-ops
- Operating Your Community Broadband Entity
- Connecting to Support Infrastructure: Understanding Purchasing Co-operatives and Buying Groups
- Unique Governance and Management Needs of PBCs
- Strategic Planning
- Effective Meetings
OUR TEAM
UC LEADERSHIP
- Everyday people should have the essential resources and tools necessary to improve their economic livelihoods on their own terms, and;
- The types of institutions we build and leverage for economic development should be structured to bring out the best in individuals and our communities.
- Community Economic Development policies and practices;
- Triple Bottom Line business forms and hybrid enterprise, such as co-operatives, nonprofits, B-corps, small businesses, and associations, and;
- The governance and management of communities and Triple Bottom Line enterprise.
- Research translation
- Community Economic Development
- Entrepreneurship & startups
- Governance & management
Institutional Development & Capacity Building
- Government
- Corporate form and relation to strategy
- Small business scaling and franchising
Industrial Domains
- Utilities
- Electric
- Broadband
- Agriculture
- Cannabis
- Wood and cellulose
- Food
- Value chain
- Animal
- Housing
- Workforce/Missing Middle
- Cannabis
- Still working (I love my job)
- Traveling. Likely to work with my communities
- Powerlifting and meal prepping
- Drinking too much coffee and tea
- Walking Davis, listening to music, meeting with friends
Advisors
Olivia Henry - Regional Food Systems Advisor
[image of Olivia Henry]
UC ANR Executive Leadership
Glenda Humiston
Tu Tran
Gabe Youtsey
UC CAMPUS BASED AFFILIATES
Ryan Galt – Agricultural Sustainability Institute at the University of California Davis
Contact me to talk about…
Catherine Brinkley – Center for Regional Change at the University of California Davis
Contact me to talk about…
Chris Benner – Institute for Social Transformation at the University of California Santa Cruz
Contact me to talk about…
Mai Nguyen – The Design Lab at the University of California San Diego
Contact me to talk about…
HOW TO WORK WITH US
UCANR PROFESSIONALS
We are all UCANR. And while many peers in the UCANR system do not have community economic development in their title or job description, there remains a great deal of crossover and opportunities for collaboration.
Maybe you work in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and your farmer stakeholders would implement your research if you could drive the costs of inputs down. That is an economic development opportunity.
Maybe you work in forestry and you need to responsibly monetize wood products to mitigate wildfires. That is also an economic development opportunity.
If you have a research, development, or educational project with a community economic development component, please reach out. We recommend contacting your nearest County or Regional Advisor first, or look through Team [INSERT LINK] roster and connect to one of our team members closest to your interest area.
We are also looking for individuals to affiliate, join our team, and help us establish the foundations of UCANR’s CED programming! We are the Community Economic Development Program Team of the Healthy Communities Strategic Initiative, and will be forming standing Project Teams to focus on CED specializations. We welcome your energy and ideas.
Our goal is to be the nation’s leading community economic development Cooperative Extension team in the US. We do this through team building, agile strategic planning and coordination, regular and appropriate communications, and team co-production. We are motivated by the Land Grant mission to extend the university to our host communities, assist community members in overcoming barriers through public entrepreneurship, and enhance stakeholder quality of life. It is our intent to make this work a labor of love that is incredibly fun.
In affiliating, we seek commitments to
- Develop and carry out a UCANR Strategic Plan, and seek funding resources for the collective interests
- Co-produce shared programming in research, development, and education
- Publish annually a team-authored, peer reviewed publication, addressing state-of-the-art challenges and innovations in CED
- Lift each other up by promoting each other’s work across our local, state, national, and global stakeholders
- Serve in Project Team leadership roles
- Participate in regularly scheduled check-ins
- Hold rotating open office hours online so local, regional, state, and national stakeholders can interact with our team
- Impromptu Team Huddles, to help our peers think through the initiatives they are working on in their service area.
Affiliation helps us pool knowledge and resources to development shared services.
- Staffing
- Access to student researchers and graduate student researchers (currently located in Davis, but eventually at other UC’s around the state).
CAMPUS-BASED UC PROFESSIONALS
Dear colleague: Welcome! We are your colleagues. As community-facing faculty, we are your eyes and ears on the ground around the state.
COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDER
We are here to serve you.
[NOTE: I would really like to add language here where we basically pitch ourselves as the anti-consultancy. “Why go to the out-of-touch Big Four when you can have a cheap date with the experts in the UC system?”]