| Grisham,
Vaughn L., Hand in Hand: Community and Economic
Development in Tupelo. Washington, D.C.:
The Aspen Institute, 1999.
It
would be easy, contemplating the riveting story
of Tupelo's growth since 1940, to imagine that
it is unique, engendered by a confluence of
circumstances that cannot be repeated elsewhere.
In one sense, of course, Tupelo is unique. It
seems fair to say that no other community in
its circumstances has accomplished so much over
the last half-century with such modest resources.
But it is not Tupelo's distinctiveness that
makes it worth reading about; it is its ordinariness.
In the end, all Tupelo has ever had to work
with is what even the most beaten-down, dispirited
community has--its own people. Over the years,
Tupelo may have figured out better than most
how to connect those people one to another,
but that is something any community ought to
be able to do. In this case study, Vaughn Grisham
and his co-writer Rob Gurwitt set forth both
the spellbinding story and the guiding principles
which have undergirded Tupelo's journey of transformation.
The Tupelo Story is a star to steer by for those
who would wish a better life for themselves
and their neighbors.
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