Our public affairs programming is aimed at examining timely topics affecting Arkansas and the well-being of all its citizens.

Opportunities for participants to hear presentations from both national and state authorities is intended to provide objective information, create a free exchange of ideas and generate productive debate.

Click on a program or scroll down for more information:

Public Policy Program

We call our public policy programs “strategic conversations.” They are centered on intensive one- to four-day meetings of small groups focused on a single issue. These conversations are structured and facilitated discussions among individuals designed to generate ideas and new thinking around a topic. Participants have prerequisite knowledge and come ready to contribute.

 A strategic conversation: 

  • is a highly collaborative process
  • allows for different aspects to be explored and diverse perspectives to be voiced
  • is an open process that needs to be conducted in a safe environment where all ideas can be shared and heard with thoughts expanded before any conclusions are drawn
  • leads to action.

By the end of a successful strategic conversation, the facilitator will have guided the group as a whole to decide on a course of action.

These programs include those initiated by the Rockefeller Institute and those co-sponsored by organizations and institutions that share our objectives. Our staff welcomes proposals from outside groups who wish to suggest a topic on which to convene a meeting. 


Agritourism Initiative
 

Agritourism and rural economic development was one of our first efforts in using the “strategic conversation” approach to discuss how to expand economic opportunities for hard-hit farm and rural-based businesses through the development of agritourism. Representatives from more than 20 different organizations attended the meeting. 

The development of an 18-month agritourism pilot project in the Arkansas River Valley region led by the Rockefeller Institute was one immediate outcome of this strategic conversation. Funded through a USDA Rural Business Opportunity Grant, the goal of this project is to expand opportunities for farm and rural businesses in the six counties immediately surrounding the Petit Jean Mountain. 

The Arkansas Agritourism Initiative is the second result, the goal of which is to facilitate the development of the agritourism industry in Arkansas.

Download more information about agritourism (Adobe PDF files):

Agritourism in Arkansas Newsletter - Spring 2008
Agritourism Brochure


REEL STORIES
 Documentary Film Series

REEL STORIES about Real People, Problems, and Possibilities

What makes documentaries so intriguing? Why is documentary film-making growing in popularity? What goes into the making of a documentary? What is the real role of a documentary film – art form, impetus, expose? All these and more are the questions we will delve into during REEL STORIES.

The purpose of REEL STORIES is as follows:

  • Encourage civic engagement by challenging participants to think critically about important social, cultural, economic, environmental issues of our time 
  • Enhance media literacy by fostering public understanding and appreciation of the documentary film genre  
  • Explore the artistic aspect of documentary film-making

Click here for screening dates and additional information.


Public Lectures
 

Scheduled at different times of the year, lecture topics are diverse and are intended to encourage a free-flowing exchange of ideas across disciplines, geographic borders and cultures. Past lectures have been presented by Nina Totenberg, one of the most well-known authorities on the affairs of the United States Supreme Court, and Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson, the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History. 


Winthrop Rockefeller Distinguished Lectures Program
 

The Rockefeller Institute now serves as the official home for the administration of the Winthrop Rockefeller Distinguished Lectures program. 

This program was established in 1972 by friends of Governor Rockefeller and assists faculty at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, University of Arkansas Pine Bluff, University of Arkansas at Monticello, University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and the Winthrop Rockefeller Institute in obtaining outstanding visiting lecturers to communicate ideas that stimulate public discussion, intellectual debate and cultural advancement.  

The lectures are free and open to the public. Most speakers interact with students prior to their public lecture and mingle with the audience afterward. 


Partnership Opportunity Grant

for Faculty Members of the University of Arkansas System 

A goal of the Rockefeller Institute is to serve as a bridge between the scholarly community and the world of public affairs.  

To accomplish this, our Partnership Opportunity Grant initiative helps facilitate exchange, interaction and collaboration among scholars by partnering with University of Arkansas System faculty, and/or professional organizations outside of the University of Arkansas System sponsored by a faculty member, in designing, developing and delivering conferences on public affairs issues of interest.

The Rockefeller Institute provides a place for participants to present essential research, explore promising policies or disseminate research results to a state or national gathering. For further information contact Sherry Walker, Director of Programs, at (501) 727-6299 or send an e-mail


Scholar-In-Residence Program

for Faculty Members of the University of Arkansas System 

The purpose of the Visiting Scholar-in-Residence Program is to support scholars and practitioners at the various campuses and entities of the University of Arkansas System in a concluding phase of research, study or creative endeavor.

The program offers opportunities for those selected to carry out disciplined work in a setting conducive to contemplation and reflection. Freed from day-to-day demands, visiting scholars-in-residence have the time and space necessary to think, write and create.  For further information contact Sherry Walker at (501) 727-6299 or send an e-mail