About this Event
1957 E Street NW, Washington, DC 20052
From Evidence to Power:
Community Partnerships and Systems Change
Tuesday, April 21, 2026, 12:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. ET
Check-in and lunch begin at 11:30 a.m.
Reception to follow
Hybrid Event
Attend in person or virtually
George Washington University
The State Room on the 7th Floor
1957 E Street NW
Washington, DC 20052
What becomes possible when communities don’t just inform research but shape it?
This convening—hosted by the Urban Institute, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Policies for Action (P4A) program, the Institute for Socioeconomic Opportunity at The George Washington University (GW) and the Center for Community Resilience at GW’s Milken Institute School of Public Health—brings together national leaders and practitioners, community and research partners, policymakers, funders, journalists, and storytellers to explore that question.
Drawing on P4A projects that center community partnerships, the program examines what it takes—structurally and relationally—to move evidence toward power. The focus is practical: how communities set research priorities, guide methods, interpret findings, and determine how evidence moves into policy and practice. Creative work will be integrated throughout the program, drawing directly from the communities and projects featured in the panels. This may include oral histories, visual art, zines, film, and other creative work. Community voices will be present in every session as framers and knowledge producers, not as guests.
The program will feature four panels, each exploring a different dimension of community-driven research and systems change:
Keynote:
Panel 1: Reparations: Memory, Harm, and the Politics of Evidence
How have communities defined harms, articulated remedies, and attempted to influence institutional design in reparative policy processes? This panel examines how community-led research has shaped—or sought to shape—reparations policy and what it means for public testimony to function as planning data.
Speakers:
Panel 2: Land: Ownership, Justice, and Community-Defined Remedy
Land is a site of power—materially, historically, and symbolically. This panel brings Indigenous sovereignty and Black land loss into the same frame, asking what community-led evidence reveals about structural disparities and what remedies communities themselves propose.
Speakers:
Panel 3: Community: Keeping it Real: Community Power, Constraints, and the
Work of Doing This Well
This closing panel creates space for honesty about what makes community-driven policy work both powerful and hard. We'll explore what distinguishes real community participation from performative engagement, where community evidence has actually shifted policy and practice, and what it takes—structurally, relationally, financially—to sustain this work.
Speakers:
Closing remarks:
Please join us for a reception from 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
We strive to host inclusive, accessible events that enable all individuals to engage fully. Please email amber.holland@gwu.edu if you require any accommodations or have any questions about this event.