Community Network
Home to a growing network of civic catalysts committed to deepening citizenship among the people and places they call home.

Across the country, our program alumni are creating thoughtful, hands-on ways for people to connect, reflect, and take spirited civic action in their communities. This is both timeless and timely work.
Our Community Network provides a structured way for our alumni stay connected and engaged after their program experience with Citizen University. Through online and in person gatherings, we continue to create together, we renew our civic faith, deepen our understanding of the challenges around us, and imagine new ways forward. We hold complexity, practice discernment, and celebrate the energy of being in community with others who care deeply and act boldly.
For alumni: visit our members-only Community homepage →
Activating citizenship in countless, creative ways
The alumni in our Community are leading programs with young people focused on service, identity, and storytelling. They’re using art, theater, and public dialogue to explore big questions and build local connections. They’re giving talks, hosting conferences, launching video series, writing op-eds, hosting Civic Suppers, and organizing murals — creative and multi-modal ways to invite people into meaningful civic experiences with lasting impact.
They’re making civic life more personal, more powerful, and more rooted in real relationships — creating pathways for people to lean into civic life, not out.
Whether bringing a few neighbors together or organizing a citywide event, we’re showing what it looks like to strengthen civic culture — by building trust, cultivating belonging, and demonstrating what’s possible when we show up in public life. Together, we’re helping people across the country feel more connected and more committed to shaping the places we live.
The catalysts who make up this Community
Here are spotlights on just a few members of this network – whose authentic expressions of citizenship are catalytic…
Jackie Wolven thought she’d only be a visitor to Eureka Springs, Arkansas but ended up doing just the opposite. Now as the Director of their Main Street Alliance, Jackie has adapted the Civic Saturday model and woven it into four annual Civic Sessions. She and her team organize a series of events and activities sprinkled across a few weeks that inspire neighbors to reconnect with each other, remind themselves what they love about Eureka Springs, and recommit to shaping and sustaining their town.
As Executive Director of North Carolina Campus Engagement, Leslie Garvin supports a statewide network of colleges and universities working to prepare students for lives of civic and social responsibility by orchestrating profound experiences with and for college students. A skilled facilitator and trainer, Leslie has equipped countless young people and adults with tools for dialogue, reflection, and action — ranging from deliberative practices to Theater of the Oppressed — based on our Power + Character curriculum. Leslie brings both strategic depth and heart to every space she leads.
Sindhu Dwarampudi, from outside of Atlanta, is launching Civic Sparks, an upcoming public video series on YouTube designed to spark reflection, connection, and action through the lens of civic culture. Each short episode will explore themes like community building, courage, and belonging, blending personal storytelling with timely civic topics to help viewers feel seen and inspired. Through accessible, emotionally resonant stories drawn from regular people and their everyday lives, the series will invite viewers into their own reflection, with prompts and journaling ideas.
Adrian McConnell is the founding Executive Director of Youth Revive, Inc., where he leads the Ignite Me Action Civics Curriculum to empower marginalized youth in forming identities and skills to live like powerful, responsible citizens. Through Ignite Me, he equips young people with civic knowledge, leadership skills, and a passion for community impact. With nearly two decades of experience in youth engagement, Adrian is committed to closing the civic empowerment gap and fostering the next generation of changemakers.
Emiliano Juárez is a rising civic leader and advocate from Westchester, New York. His civic work spans climate advocacy, youth empowerment, and cultural organizing — having led over 20 congressional meetings through Heirs to Our Ocean’s Youth Action Council for the United Nations Ocean Decade, and organizing the Música y Mole Festival to celebrate Mexican heritage and uplift local businesses. His work reflects a deep belief in youth voice, cross-cultural connection, and bold, local action in service of the common good.