Title: Community Building Principles
1Community Building Principles
2Working Definition of the Asset Based Approach
The starting point is to work with community
/neighborhood residents and leadership to
identify and mobilize assets - the skills,
abilities and resources of all residents,
associations and organizations - and based on the
collective agenda leverage community resources to
compliment not replace the existing assets.
3Two Solutions - Two Paths
Needs
Assets
Services to Meet Needs
Connect Contribute
Clients
Citizens
People are the Answer
Programs are the Answer
4Community Building
A Comprehensive approach to improving
conditions, expanding opportunities, and
promoting positive change in communities that
addresses many interrelated issues through
collaborative efforts, with residents at the
forefront. (Casey-Speak)
5Common Themes
- It is not a collection of agencies that provide
separate programs for separate problems. - It is a networking tool through which local
people assemble to exchange services and act
together for the good of their community. - It identifies and uses the human and
organizational assets in a specific geographical
area. In this way, the neighborhood becomes a
means to release the power of families and
neighborhoods from within.
6Community Building Competencies
- Community Partnering
- Information Sharing
- Initiative
- Community Understanding
- Vision
- Empowerment and Influencing
- Conceptual Mapping
- Listening and Understanding
Source DTI
7Community Building Principles
- Participation and Inclusion
- Build Capacity Focus on Assets
- Civic Responsibility
- Collaboration and Partnership
- Comprehensive
- Embrace Diversity
- Learn
- Focus on Results
8PARTICIPATION AND INCLUSION
- Directly involve people affected to decide,
develop and implement solutions in their
neighborhoods and communities. - Create an environment which encourages and
supports the participation of all people and
differing perspectives. - Ensure that the process is inclusive, open, and
that information is shared by all
- A variety of impacted residents of differing
social and economic groups, are invited to share
their gifts and participate in the work of their
community in increasing proportions.
9BUILD CAPACITY FOCUS ON ASSETS
- Community-building participants exhibit increased
commitment to and confidence in the collective
action of neighborhood residents and leadership.
- Continually identify and develop leadership
potential of people at the grassroots level and
provide opportunities to lead. - Ensure that information which portrays community
needs/ problems is balanced with information
about community assets and that information is
shared with all affected individuals and groups.
- Support efforts that lead to sustainable
solutions emphasizing leadership development,
citizen participation, partnerships with agencies
and organizations, and community economic
development. - Support the development of solutions that will
effectively build upon the capabilities and
assets of each neighborhood and community through
the strengths of individuals, families
associations, and organizations.
10The Needs Map
Graffiti
Welfare Recipients
Drugs
Seniors Alone
Slums
Crime
Labeled People
Illiteracy
Unemployment
11Consequences of the Power of the Needs Map
- Internalizations of the deficiencies identified
by local residents - Destruction of social capital
- Reinforcement of narrow categorical funding flows
- Direction of funds toward professional helpers,
not residents - Focus on leaders who magnify deficiencies
- Rewards failure, produces dependency
- Creates hopelessness
12The Asset Map
Local Institutions
Schools
Businesses
Libraries
Citizens Associations
Churches
Block Clubs
Gifts of Individuals
Parks
Hospitals
Youth
Seniors
Skills
Athletic Groups
Cultural Groups
Labeled People
Artists
13CIVIC RESPONSIBILITY
- More individuals choose to exercise and fulfill
their civic and community responsibilities.
- Work to mobilize residents and communities for
collective action. - Promote the civic responsibility of residents in
all aspects of community and neighborhood life. - Encourage activities that follow the principles
and values of democracy. - Encourage individuals and groups to freely
express their views. - Promote the concept of collective and individual
leadership and responsibility for the common good.
14Nonprofit as a Catalytic Organization to Build
Social Capital
- Help lay the foundation for community action
but do not act as the driving force. - Are not seen as the community problem-solver, but
as a catalyst to marshal resources, engage
individuals in public life, convene members of
the community and spur discussion on how the
community can act on its concerns. - Set the stage for widespread civic engagement.
- Have the trust of the community.
15COLLABORATION AND PARTNERSHIP
- Initiatives undertaken increase the number of
involved partners and result in increased
collaboration.
- Strongly encourage collaborative activity amongst
neighborhoods, agencies, businesses, funders,
policy-makers and other stakeholders. - Encourage activities that respond to the
uniqueness of each neighborhood and community by
bringing together the strengths of local
individuals, associations, businesses,
faith-based entities and other organizations. - Promote open communication with an emphasis on
active listening and reaching consensus.
16COMPREHENSIVE
- Create incentives for approaches and
interventions which cut across program boundaries
whenever and wherever possible (e. g. education,
employment, housing, health, and human
services). - Balance priorities which focus on solving
individual problems with actions that
strategically target the development of
neighborhoods and communities. - Support the integration of community economic
development, human services and civic
responsibility as a comprehensive approach to
community building.
- Community-building interventions and approaches
cross organizational boundaries (e.g.,
businesses, churches, human service agencies,
etc.) in addressing community issues.
17EMBRACE DIVERSITY
- A variety of impacted residents of differing
social and economic groups, are invited and
participate in the work of their community in
increasing proportions.
- Recognize and celebrate the differences and
uniqueness of residents in neighborhoods and
communities by encouraging and supporting
inclusiveness. - Promote the values and history of our many
cultural traditions and ethnic groups.
18Circles of Care and Responsibilities
Government
Organizations
Faith Based
Friends
Family
Self
Neighbors
Associations
Helping Professionals
19LEARN
- Demonstrate that successes and failures of
community building efforts are used as learning
opportunities for communities and organizations.
- Promote a supportive environment which allows
communities and organizations to continually
learn and grow. - Support innovations where all can learn together
from successes and failures.
20FOCUS ON RESULTS
- People will understand that the results of
community building will be short-term,
intermediate, and long-term in their nature.
- Encourage a system which gathers, analyzes,
tracks, and shares information that will allow
all to build upon their experiences. - Demonstrate genuine accountability for outcomes
to residents, donors, and all stakeholders. - Acknowledge that to be successful this work
requires a long term commitment.
21Lessons Learned from a Community Building
Perspective
- It can not be overstated that the long term
success and sustainability of our work is
dependent on strong active citizen involvement.
The work of agencies and other institutions is to
build strong communities through citizen
involvement. It is the communitys work to solve
problems. - We must develop and support effective citizen
engagement and empowerment, helping all residents
identify and share their gifts. - It is not just about money. It is not about
funding, grants and allocations it is about
strategically leveraging individual, neighborhood
and community resources. - No one institution or group can solve todays
problems alone, we must all work together.
22Effective Communities
- Look inside first to solve problems
- Relationships are seen as power
- Have a good sense of assets and capacities, not
just needs - Leaders open doors
- Citizens are involved
- People take responsibility
23The New Paradigm
24The Dilemma of Clients
Clients are people who are dependent upon and
controlled by their helpers and leaders. Clients
are people who understand themselves in terms of
their deficiencies and people who wait for others
to act on their behalf Citizens on the other
hand, are people who understand their own
problems in their own terms. Citizens perceive
their relationship to one another and they
believe in their capacity to act. Good clients
make bad citizens. Good citizens make strong
Communities. Tom Dewar, The Dangers of
Clienthood
25Action Steps Should
- Demonstrate widespread participation by local
residents, organizations and institutions - Clearly identify the strengths and capacities
that local residents and organizations will
contribute to the effort - Mobilize, utilize, enhance and expand these local
capacities - Contribute to building the local economy, i.e.
employing residents, enhancing local purchasing,
etc. - Build on significant investments of resources and
time by local residents and organizations.
26Ten Objectives for Effective Action
- Increase the capacity for local leadership
- Increase individual capacity for self-reliance
- Identify and build on local assets
- Build community then build a plan
- Identify and build collaborative relationships
- Make concentrated efforts to include youth
- Become a catalyst for celebrating diversity and
overcoming the power of racism - Identify opportunities that most foster
participation - Provide appropriate professional assistance to
build community more quickly - Ensure a bottom-up process for neighborhood
renewal
Source Atlanta United Way
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