About the Just Communities Accredited Practitioner Credential
What It Is
The Just Communities Accredited Practitioner designation equips you to implement community-scale development that repairs historical harm, prevents displacement, and builds lasting resilience.
- Master a powerful framework for change
- Join a movement, not just a network
Stand out for the right reasons: Signal your commitment to justice-centered development that communities control and benefit from. In a field full of lofty ambitions, demonstrate you have the skills to deliver transformative results.
Ready to lead change that communities actually want?
Download the Complete AP Program GuideWhy It Matters
Today’s land use and development challenges have never been more complex. Economic disparities, climate vulnerability, housing shortages, and systemic inequities are converging in the same neighborhoods—the ones historically excluded from investment and now facing the greatest climate risks.
These are not just problems. They are opportunities for radical transformation that demand practitioners who can support community-led solutions with strategic precision and genuine partnership.
Becoming an AP isn’t about passing a test—it’s about having the expertise to effectively support community leadership, and joining a living network of changemakers. This process helps clarify your values, build alignment, and strengthen your role in collective action.
Join the Community. Enroll Now.
Meet The Faculty

Sterling Johnson
Sterling Johnson is a systems thinker and economic strategist committed to advancing equitable economic opportunity across public, private, and social sectors. A native of Atlanta, Sterling’s passion for economic justice is grounded in the legacy of the Southern freedom movement and his early community experiences serving his community alongside his family. Sterling currently serves as Director of the Just Opportunity Portfolio at the Partnership for Southern Equity (PSE), where he leads initiatives to advance economic mobility and security through advocacy, research, grantmaking, and direct service, all grounded in values of equity, justice, and shared prosperity. With PSE, he plays a vital role in addressing the region’s economic mobility challenges head-on, deploying programming and advocating for policies that democratize economic development, increase access to capital, and create pathways to upward economic mobility. Since coming to PSE, he has provided over $500,000 in non-dilutive capital investment in Atlanta’s small businesses and youth entrepreneurs of color, while providing countless hours of coaching, technical assistance, and community organizing.
Prior to PSE, he served as Director of Public Policy at Griffin & Strong, P.C., where he led disparity studies and diverse contracting and workforce initiatives for major public-private projects, including Atlanta’s State Farm Arena. Sterling is also the founder of Umoja Lab, a consultancy focused on equitable organizational development and social sector innovation.
Sterling holds a Master of Public Administration degree with a concentration in planning and economic development from Georgia State University’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, and a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology from Furman University, where he was also a Gates Millennium Scholar, track athlete, and 4 year football letterman. His insights have been featured in Governing Magazine, he is a recurring contributor for Next City, he was named a 2022 Emerging Leader by the Bank of America Neighborhood Builders Program, a 2023 Everyday Hero by the Atlanta Journal Constitution, and most recently, a 2025 Fulcrum Fellow with the Center for Community Investment. Sterling continues to serve his community as a member of the Outstanding Atlanta Class of 2022, LEAD Atlanta Class of 2024, and through board service as a member of the Clark Atlanta Public Administration Department Advisory Committee, The South DeKalb Tribe, and The Guild’s Community Stewardship Trust.

Alayne Hightower
Alayne serves as the Just Communities AP Program Manager, bringing over 30 years of experience in community-based programming and cross-sector collaboration. Her career spans multiple disciplines, grounded in a deep commitment to advancing equity and social impact.
At the core of Alayne’s work is a profound belief in the power of collective action to bring positive change. She leads with an unwavering commitment to equity, inclusivity, and a shared sense of responsibility for the well-being of all.
Alayne holds a Master of Public Policy with a concentration in Sustainability and a bachelor’s degree in political science. To expand her impact, she also earned certifications in data analytics and data visualization tools, leveraging technology to amplify impact and social good.

Tsedey Betru
Tsedey is the Director of Just Communities at the Partnership for Southern Equity. Originally from Ethiopia, Tsedey’s experiences immigrating to the U.S. and growing up in Memphis, TN, have shaped and informed her 20-year career advancing racial equity in community and economic development. She started her career as a community organizer for the National Voting Rights Institute and the 7th St. Community Improvement Initiative in Oakland, CA. After completing her graduate studies in urban policy analysis and nonprofit management, Tsedey worked at PolicyLink and at the Drum Major Institute for Public Policy in NYC before becoming the Vice President of Community LIFT in Memphis, TN. More recently, she has moved into economic development and philanthropic advising, working as the Manager of Community Affairs & Strategic Initiatives for Invest Atlanta, as an economic development advisor to Memphis Mayor Wharton, and a philanthropic advisor to the Estee Lauder Charitable Foundation, Waverley Street Foundation, and Gates Foundation. Tsedey currently serves on the City of Atlanta’s Urban Design Commission, the Atlanta BeltLine Public Arts Advisory, and raises funds for the African Diasporic Arts Museum of Atlanta.

Suzanne Burnes
Suzanne Burnes brings more than 30 years of experience in sustainability, community development, and environmental justice to her role as director of the Just Growth Portfolio for the Partnership for Southern Equity (PSE). Highlights of her accomplishments at PSE include: facilitation of the Atlanta Water Equity Task Force from 2018-2020, resulting in the Atlanta Water Equity Roadmap; leadership in the development, delivery, and adoption of Georgia’s first local government Equitable Growth and Inclusion Strategic Plan for the City of East Point in 2021; and leading the acquisition and evolution of EcoDistricts to form Just Communities, a new national framework for neighborhood-scale equitable, climate-resilient community development. Her career includes serving as an EPA and Department of Defense consultant on Superfund research, litigation support, and environmental compliance, and founding an Atlanta community development corporation. She led Georgia state government’s efforts to create public-private sustainability partnerships; served as executive director of local nonprofit Sustainable Atlanta; and founded Collective Wisdom Group, an Atlanta-based firm serving nonprofit, local government, higher education, and philanthropic clients. Through her practice, she notably advised local governments across the Southeastern US on their sustainability efforts, particularly around partnership development and integration of equity into their climate resilience and green infrastructure projects. Suzanne’s strengths are in building relationships among diverse voices for community and ecosystem benefit.

Rob Bennett
Rob is a senior advisor to the Partnership for Southern Equity and the founder and former CEO of EcoDistricts and Portland Sustainability Institute. With over 30 years of experience, he is a recognized leader in the sustainable and equitable cities movement, specializing in municipal sustainable development projects, standards, and policies at the intersection of green and equitable urban design, planning, and development. Before founding EcoDistricts, Rob established the Portland Sustainability Institute (PoSI), a mayoral think tank dedicated to accelerating sustainability policy and project innovation in Portland. His career also includes work with the Clinton Foundation, where he supported climate action initiatives across North America, and with the cities of Portland, Oregon and Vancouver, Canada. In these roles, he developed green development market transformation initiatives, including catalytic projects such as Lloyd Crossing (now the Lloyd EcoDistrict in Portland), Brewery Blocks (Portland), South Waterfront (Portland), and the 2010 Olympic Village (Vancouver).

Kirsten Cook
Kirsten Cook is a racial equity practitioner with experience and education in the fields of city planning, social science, and data and research. For the last seven years, Kirsten Cook has worked at the Partnership for Southern Equity, where she currently serves as Research & Analytics Director. In this role, she built the organization’s data equity framework and provides ongoing data analysis and research support for the organization’s issue area portfolios, which focus on equitable development, energy equity, health equity, and economic inclusion. Kirsten has also worked on projects related to racial equity in planning, development, and infrastructure while serving in PSE’s Just Growth portfolio. She contributed to the Equitable Strategic Plan for the City of East Point, the first of its kind in Georgia, the Water Equity Roadmap for the City of Atlanta. And resident academies that contribute to building the equity civic infrastructure in metro Atlanta. Outside of PSE, she has worked in local government as a County Planner and in non-profit planning organizations in both Atlanta and Chicago. Having spent the first 18 years of her life in Southeast Asia, Kirsten thrives in diverse settings and approaches her work with a global perspective.

Jennifer Cobb
Jennifer Cobb serves as the Just Solutions Manager for the Partnership for Southern Equity and helps organizations create and implement racially equitable policies, services, and programs. Jennifer has 5 years of consulting experience, focused on growth strategies with inclusion at the core, and over 10 years of experience in project management, program design and assessment, and partnership development. Prior to joining PSE, Jennifer worked in workforce development where she partnered with companies to increase the pipeline of opportunities for people in under-resourced communities while HR professionals on inclusive hiring practices. Jennifer has held project management roles at Barnes & Noble and First Book, a social enterprise expanding access to quality books in disadvantaged communities, and community development roles at Georgia Tech and Morehouse College. Jennifer served on the board for the Young Nonprofit Professional Network DC from 2014 – 2016, launching their signature mentorship program to provide training and coaching to 50+ nonprofessionals each year. She currently serves as a co-organizer for The Free Black Women’s Library Atlanta, a mobile library and community project centering literature as a tool for liberation.