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Community Psychology Power and Participation

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Title: Community Psychology Power and Participation


1
Community PsychologyPower and Participation
  • Paul Duckett
  • EGB E48
  • 0161 247 2552
  • p.duckett_at_mmu.ac.uk

2
Content of Lecture
  • Definitions of power
  • Types of power
  • Group exercise types of power you are subjected
    to and use as students in HE
  • Definitions of empowerment
  • Levels individual, organisational, community
  • Definition of citizen participation
  • Concept of participation and active citizenship

3
Where is it?
4
Definition of Power
  • The capacity to produce change
  • But, in a culture of competitive
    hyper-individualism, power manifests into
    power-over
  • A has power over B to get B to do something that
    they would not ordinarily do

5
Typology of Power
(Based on Wong, 1979 cited in Orford, 1993)
6
Group exercise 115 mins
  • List the types of power you are subjected to and
    that you subject others to as students in HE

7
Two opposing views on power
  • Consensus view
  • Power is used benignly for the good of the
    people. Power helps organisations, communities
    and societies to work smoothly (e.g., Talcott
    Parsons)
  • Conflict view
  • There is a constant state of conflict between
    groups and power is used by the dominant group
    over the non dominant group to protect the
    dominant groups interests (e.g., C. Wright Mills)

8
Conflicting perspectives
Preserve the status quo
Challenge the status quo
9
Why a focus on power is important
  • As a community psychologist, I assume that power
    is intimately bound up with mental health, i.e.
    that disempowerment is implicated in the
    causation of many, if not most, mental health
    problems and that empowerment is implicated in
    the promotion and enhancement of positive mental
    health
  • (Fryer, 199882)

10
Main causes of poor mental health are
  • socio-political
  • (discrimination, oppression, social exclusion)
  • socio-economic
  • (poverty, un/underemployment, poor housing)

11
Why a focus on power is important
  • Academic psychologists seldom engage seriously
    with issues of power. When they do they often
    conceptualize power as an individual/personality,
    interpersonal or organizational variable.
    However, community psychologists believe that in
    Western societies power is most powerfully
    structured through socio-occupational
    stratification, relative wealth, gender, dominant
    (often ethnic) group membership, age and
    organizational structures
  • (Fryer, 199882)

12
Power is
  • Relational
  • Structural

13
Empowerment
  • a process, a mechanism by which people,
    organisations, and communities gain mastery over
    their affairs
  • (Rappaport, 1987122)

14
Organisational ChangeEmpowerment
  • EMPOWERMENT
  • A helping hand?
  • Stop getting in the way?
  • ORGANISATIONAL EMPOWERMENT
  • Empowering organisations
  • Empowered organisations

15
Community Activism
16
Citizen Participation
  • A process in which individuals take part in
    decision making in the institutions, programs and
    environments that affect them
  • (Heller, et al., 1984339)
  • Citizen participation is not simply volunteering
    time or resources, but occurs when citizens take
    part in making decisions for the community
  • (Dalton et al. 2001342)

17
Citizen Participationmeans and ends
  • As a means to an end
  • To get citizens to have a sense of ownership over
    the decisions being made and thus generate a
    greater level of commitment to that decision
  • To have a decision informed by those who know the
    problems best to achieve ecological validity
  • As an end in itself
  • Participation as a value an essential component
    of social justice and egalitarianism

18
Group Exercise 2(15 mins)
  • How are you active citizens?
  • Eg.
  • Your community psychology placements
  • Your extra-curricular activities
  • Your previous and present employment experiences

19
Citizen Participation Active Citizenship
  • New Labour brought active citizenship into
    education employment
  • (Higher education active community fund, national
    curriculum new deal)
  • WHOPPEEE HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN .?

20
  • Doh!
  • (Simpson, n.d.)

21
Active Citizenship
  • Social Democracy
  • the social policy agenda adopted by the Labour
    government in its first term of office. Such
    policy stresses the responsibilities and duties
    of citizens to play an active part in the labour
    market. Through such social policy, employment
    has become a duty of citizenship
  • (Duckett, 2002 101)

22
Third Way moralisation of politics
  • If distribution in present-day society can no
    longer be optimised politically - or is optimal
    under the circumstances - deficiencies can no
    longer be attributed to removable imperfections
    in society, but only to the moral shortcomings of
    individuals. Here the moral imperative is
    directed first and foremost at the prospective
    victims of modernisation, the recipients of
    welfare benefits, whose duty to accept training
    or a job is repeatedly pointed out. The less
    likely the prospect of good jobs (i.e.
    tolerably secure and acceptably paid employment),
    the more strongly this duty is emphasised.
  • (Ehrke, 19997)

23
The ends
  • This political ideology is reflected in the New
    Public Health movement and the concept of the
    Risk Society (Peterson Lupton, 1996) where
    social and economic issues become atomized as
    individual, personal responsibility involving
    issues of consumer and lifestyle choices
  • (Duckett, 2001103)
  • Conspicuous to these social policies is a theme
    critiqued by community psychology, a fascination
    with the individual and the tendency to make the
    person rather than place culpable for
    socio-economic and structural inequalities.
  • (Duckett, 2001103)

24
Active Citizens and Victim Blaming Ideology
  • the adoption of social democratic social
    policies and third-way political thinking
    sidelines attention away from the systemic
    factors that are responsible for the structural
    inequalities that exist in society.
  • (Duckett, 2002102)

25
The Keystones of aConsumer Society
  • Choice
  • Voice
  • Participation
  • Change

26
References
  • Dalton, J.H., Elias, M.J., Wandersman, A.
    (2001). Community Psychology Linking individuals
    and communities. Stamford Wadsworth.
  • Duckett, P.S. (2002). Community Psychology,
    Millennium Volunteers and Higher Education a
    disruptive triptych? Journal of Community and
    Applied Community Psychology, 12, 94-107.
  • Fryer, D. (1998). Editors preface. Journal of
    Community and Applied Social Psychology, 8,
    75-88.
  • Heller, K., Price, R.H., Reinharz, S., Riger, S.,
    Wandersman, A. (1984). Psychology and Community
    Change challenges of the future. Homewood, IL
    Wadsworth.
  • Rappaport, J. (1987). Terms of empowerment/exempla
    rs of prevention toward a theory for community
    psychology. American Journal of Community
    Psychology, 15, 121-144.
  • Soderbergn, S. (Director) (2000). Erin
    Brockovich. US Universal Pictures. (starring
    Julia Roberts and Albert Finney)
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