6,113,531 research outputs found
ADDRESSING GAPS IN THE DELIVERY OF COMMUNITY SERVICES: THE CASE OF ONE INNER-CITY COMMUNITY
The need for more effective approaches to the delivery of health and social services in inner-city communities is well established. Attempts to improve service delivery in such areas as housing, health care and job training usually concentrate on strengthening\u27 community education efforts and other strategies designed to motivate potential users of community services. Little emphasis has been placed on increasing the communication between different community service providers to achieve better coordination among organizations responsible for service delivery in inner-city communities. As a consequence, major service gaps exist including such problems as duplication of services, limited accessiblity [accessibility], and the absence of essential services. Such service gaps may go unnoticed unless community service providers and inner-city residents organize to address these problems. This paper reports on a study of community service providers who are working with residents to deal with the problem of service gaps in their inner-city community
Contested cultures of care: research with and for the plus one community on the plus one experience - evaluation report
Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire Collaborative Outreach Projec
Speaking as one, but not speaking up : dealing with new moral taint in an occupational online community
This paper builds a process theory of how participants in an online community deal with a new identity threat. Based upon the in-depth, interpretive case study of an online community of retail bankers, it develops a grounded theory that reveals that participants in an online community deal with new taint by protecting their occupation's identity but not by attempting to repair its external image. In the investigated community, reactions progressed from rejecting the taint to distancing from it and, finally, resigning to it. Overall, the dynamics of an occupational online community reveal that the objective of protecting the existing identity of its members supersede that of taking a more proactive stance to address the identity threat and attempt to influence new regulations affecting the occupation
Under One Roof Project Improves Community Options For Individuals With Disabilities And Their Families
What's Going on in Community Media
What's Going On in Community Media shines a spotlight on media practices that increase citizen participation in media production, governance, and policy. The report summarizes the findings of a nationwide scan of effective and emerging community media practices conducted by the Benton Foundation in collaboration with the Community Media and Technology Program of the University of Massachusetts, Boston. The scan includes an analysis of trends and emerging practices; comparative research; an online survey of community media practitioners; one-on-one interviews with practitioners, funders and policy makers; and the information gleaned from a series of roundtable discussions with community media practitioners in Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Portland, Oregon
One Goal, One Community: Program Development and Research Results from Bond’s International Anti-Bullying Program
Perceived Community Cohesion and the Stress Process in Youth
Using survey data from two youth samples, one rural and one urban, we examine the role and significance of perceived community cohesion in the stress process. In particular, we assess the extent to which community attachment and detachment are related to depressed mood, problem substance use, and delinquency net of social statuses, stress exposure, and personal attributes. In addition, we explore the degree to which those dimensions of community cohesion explain or condition the links between the above stress-process components (e.g., social statuses, stress exposure, and personal attributes) and well-being. We find remarkably similar results across samples: community attachment is related to lower odds of problem substance use and delinquency; community detachment is related to higher levels of depressed mood, problem substance use, and delinquency; and community attachment buffers the link between stress and problem substance use. With respect to depressed mood, however, the rural youth show greater vulnerability to stress than the urban youth and unique benefits from community attachment compared to the latter. Our findings highlight the roles of community attachment and detachment in the stress process and underscore the importance of each for youth well-being in rural and urban settings
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Community Peace Work in Sri Lanka: A Critical Appraisal
YesThis paper looks at community peace work in Sri Lanka, and represents work in its early stages. It
provides a view of peace work from the perception of a Sri Lankan community peace activist. The
popular practice of treating community peace work as an apolitical exercise will be challenged. An
overview of the meta-narratives of the Sri Lankan conflict will be provided, since these inform the
broader analytic context which needs to be understood for successful community peace work to be
undertaken. Community peace building practice, which draws from knowledge of the international
conflict resolution discourse, is treated as just one `peace¿ approach among several. Community level
work is seen as one contribution to the overall peace effort in finding a resolution to the Sri Lankan
conflict
Community learning and development training for professionals engaged in community regeneration and community planning
The study was commissioned by the Scottish Executive Development Department to identify training needs and current provision of community learning and development (CLD) training for a range of professionals (other than those formally qualified in CLD) who are engaged in community regeneration and community planning (Local Government in Scotland Act 2003). It was one of a series of studies emanating from the Scottish Executive response to the review: „Empowered to Practice – the future of community learning and development training in Scotland‟. One of the themes of the report taken up by the Scottish Executive was the need for; „wider opportunities for joint training with other disciplines such as teachers, librarians, college lecturers, health workers and social workers‟
Philanthropy of Community Instrument 1: Asset Inventory Mapping (PAIM)
This is one of several instruments which have been developed to deepen the practice of grantmakers, using the lens of philanthropy of community (PoC).It is useful formapping of community assets
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