Title: Understanding Community
1Understanding Community
2Defining Community
- . . . Its the interaction of people or groups of
individuals who live within some geographic area
that provides for most of their daily needs.
They share certain values and meanings about
their common life situation. Further, these
individuals work together to address local
problems, concerns, and opportunities.
3Key Elements of Community
- Geographic area that provides for most of their
daily needs - Social interaction
- Common ties or bonds among community members
- Locality-oriented collective actions
4Functions that Communities Perform Systems
Approach
- Production-distribution-consumption
- Socialization
- Social Control
- Access to social participation
- Mutual support
5A Further Look at the Functions of the Community
- Production-Distribution-Consumption
- Includes those goods and services that are part
of daily living - Reflects economic activities
- Encompasses educational services, local
government services, religious activities,
recreational/leisure activities, media services - Socialization
- Process by which the community transmits its
knowledge, values and behavior patterns to its
individual residents. - It is at the local level that individuals
encounter and learn about their culture
6A Further Look at the Functions of the Community
- Social Control
- The process through which a group influences the
behavior of its members toward conformity with is
norms - Local Access to Participation
- We are distinctively human through our
participation in human groups most are with
friends and neighbors from the same community - Many organizations we belong to are local
chapters - Mutual Support
- Care in time of sickness, the exchange of labor,
helping out in times of distress, are often
performed locally
7Communities are Structured
- Communities are not mere masses of people who
happen to live in a given locality. Rather, they
are structured entities. - Structure refers to the underlying anatomy of
the community -- the set of mutual relations that
exist among its various parts. - Want to look at the institutional and leadership
structure of the community.
8Key Institutions inthe Community Systems
Approach
- Kinship (Family)
- Economic
- Education
- Political (Governmental)
- Religious
- Associations
9Community Institutions
- Represent patterned activities that are intended
to meet important social and economic needs
existing among community residents - They perform crucial functions that must be
performed if the community is to persist through
time
10Family Institution
- Regulate the nature of sexual relations between
people - Biological reproduction
- Care and socialization of the young
- Economic functions of providing food, shelter and
warmth for family members - Emotional intimacy
11Economic Institution
- Encompasses the roles, norms, and activities
associated with the production, distribution and
consumption of goods and services in a community. - It influences the nature of work, where
individuals get jobs, how much they earn, the
conditions of their work, their prospects for
future jobs, their spells of unemployment.
12Education Institution
- Major functions of education within the local
community are twofold - Cultural transmission and socialization
- Selection and allocation to adult positions
13Political Institution
- Its major functions include
- Protecting life, liberty and property of local
residents - Regulating conflict
- Planning, coordinating and providing public
facilities and services
14Religious Institution
- Its functions are threefold
- Provides an ongoing system of shared customs that
offer purpose to its participants - Serves as an important source of social control
by supporting certain values and norms - Provides personal support to local residents
15AssociationalInstitution
- Represent the variety of civic, service, social,
fraternal and other voluntary organizations that
exist in the community. - These offer residents a mechanism for
participating in a variety of local activities.
16Linking Functions and Institutions
Community Functions
17The Great Change in Communities
- Roland Warren states that there is a Great
Change happening in contemporary community
living. This shift is changing the complexion of
local communities.
18What are the Great Changes Occurring?
- An elaborate division of labor and specialization
- Individuals are becoming increasingly engaged in
associations and organizations based on
interests, not residence - Various sectors of the community are becoming
increasingly linked to people, communities, and
organizations outside the local area - Greater share of functions once performed by
individuals, families and neighborhoods are being
shifted to government, volunteer sector, and/or
private enterprise - Peoples values are shifting -- commitment to
community is declining
19Increasing Division of Labor
- Elaborate division of labor and specialization of
occupations is taking place - Functions are becoming narrowly defined and work
specialized - Increasing interdependence of people on one
another - Persons produce a smaller portion of the things
the family consumes - People in the same locality have no strong
occupational bonds to unite them - Increasingly, the individual wage owner doesnt
know what his/her neighbor does for a living
20Differentiation of Interests and Associations
- The principal basis for social participation
shifts from the locality to that of interest
groups - The individual often turns away from other
individuals in the immediate locality and
associates with individuals from other localities
on the basis of selective interests - Shift is from primary to secondary group
relationships - As association with neighbors decline,
individuals often find themselves strangers in
their own localities, knowing few neighbors
21Increasing Systemic Relationships to the Larger
Society
- Many organizations are becoming more a part of
their extra-community systems than they are of
the community in which they are located - The seat of decision-making is less local, and
more at the district, state, or national
decision-making levels - This relationship of local units to
extra-community system is known as the
communitys vertical ties. - Given that decision-making is transferred
elsewhere, the communitys autonomy is jeopardized
22Transfer of Functions to Profit Enterprise and
Government
- Refers to a change from the performance of
functions by individuals to functions performed
by business and government involving a direct or
indirect payment of money - As people specialize, they depend on others to
perform functions that use to be performed
themselves - Food for home use
- Painting
- Lawn and pool service
- Recreation
- Restaurants
- Car washing
- Child and elder care
23Changing Values
- Gradual acceptance of governmental engagement in
a number of fields (child care, housing, health) - Change in community approach to social problems
from that of moral reform to that of rational
planning to address the communitys problems - Loss of civic involvement or willingness to serve
in community leadership positions
24In Sum (from Horizontal to Vertical Linkages)
- Theres an increasing orientation of local
community units toward extra-community systems of
which they are a part - As such, the decision-making is shifting to
places outside the community - The result is that ties between local community
units are weakening, and community autonomy is
reduced
25Changing Nature of Relationships in Communities
- Horizontal Integration the strength of the
linkages that exist among institutions and people
at the local level - Vertical Integration reflects the extent to
which ties exists between local community
institutions (or units) and units located at
higher levels outside the community
26Horizontal Vertical Integration
American Trinity Church
First Union National Office
Goodhearts National
Glendale Community
Glendale Trinity Church
First Union Branch
Jones Family
Goodhearts of Glendale
Interaction
Roosevelt High School
City Police Dept.
Kroger Food Store
Kroger Food Chain
U.S. Dept. of Education
27- What are the Great Changes in your community?
28An Exercise
- Identify two key dimensions of The Great Change
that you feel have had the greatest impact on
your community? How has it affected the
well-being of people who live in your community? - Assemble in a small group (5-6 persons). Have
each person share his/her list of items. Agree
on three key items to share with other Groups.