Internet: Knowledge and Community

at The Evergreen State College

Community capacity

From Internet: Knowledge and Community

Revision as of 08:49, 1 February 2011 by Barste20 (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Current revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Relevant Papers

Program on Community Capacity

"The hard truth is that development must start from within the community and, in most of our urban neighborhoods, there is no other choice."

Identifying and Defining the Dimensions of Community Capacity to Provide a Basis for Measurement

"This article describes the dimensions that the symposium participants suggested as central to the construct, including participation and leadership, skills, resources, social and interorganizational networks, sense of community, understanding of community history, community power, community values, and critical reflection."

Evaluating community capacity

"The aim of the present study was to examine the convergence of two approaches used to assess community capacity in health promotion interventions."

THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT HANDBOOK: A TOOL TO BUILD COMMUNITY CAPACITY

"In order to understand community development it is important to understand that it means different things to different people in different places – and that our understanding about what constitutes effective or appropriate community development has expanded considerably in the past few years. What we do know is that it is founded on voluntary and healthy interdependence, mutual benefit and shared responsibility. In recent years, more often than not, community development has involved local people seeking and taking advantage of opportunities or working together to solve problems."

Developing a Community Science Research Agenda for Building Community Capacity for Effective Preventive Interventions

"Research has shown that prevention programming can improve community health when implemented well. There are examples of successful prevention in local communities, however many continue to face significant challenges, demonstrating a gap between science and practice. Common strategies within the United States to address this gap are available (e.g., trainings), but lack outcomes. Building community capacity to implement high quality prevention can help communities achieve positive health outcomes, thereby narrowing the gap. While there is ample research on the efficacy of evidence-based programs, there is little on how to improve community capacity to improve prevention quality. In order to narrow the gap, a new model of research—one based in Community Science—is suggested that improves the latest theoretical understanding of community capacity and evaluates technologies designed to enhance it."

Building Community Capacity for Violence Prevention

"The capacity of communities to prevent violence is examined fromthree perspectives: youth violence, child maltreatment, and intimate partner violence. The analysis suggests that community social control and collective efficacy are significant protective factors for all three types of violence, but these need to be further distinguished for their relationships to private, parochial, and state controls. It is argued that strong interpersonal ties are not the only contributor to collective efficacy and violence prevention. Weak ties, including those outside the community, and organizational ties are also seen as necessary. Violence prevention programs should be structured in ways that contribute to the communities’ own capacity to prevent violence."