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Community development

The United Nations defines community development as "a process where community members come together to take collective action and generate solutions to common problems."[1] It is a broad concept, applied to the practices of civic leaders, activists, involved citizens, and professionals to improve various aspects of communities, typically aiming to build stronger and more resilient local communities.

Community development is also understood as a professional discipline, and is defined by the International Association for Community Development as "a practice-based profession and an academic discipline that promotes participative democracy, sustainable development, rights, economic opportunity, equality and social justice, through the organisation, education and empowerment of people within their communities, whether these be of locality, identity or interest, in urban and rural settings".[2]


Community development seeks to empower individuals and groups of people with the skills they need to effect change within their communities. These skills are often created through the formation of social groups working for a common agenda. Community developers must understand both how to work with individuals and how to affect communities' positions within the context of larger social institutions.


Community development as a term has taken off widely in anglophone countries, i.e. the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, as well as other countries in the Commonwealth of Nations. It is also used in some countries in Eastern Europe with active community development associations in Hungary and Romania. The Community Development Journal, published by Oxford University Press, since 1966 has aimed to be the major forum for research and dissemination of international community development theory and practice.[3]


Community development approaches are recognised internationally. These methods and approaches have been acknowledged as significant for local social, economic, cultural, environmental and political development by such organisations as the UN, WHO, OECD, World Bank, Council of Europe and EU. There are a number of institutions of higher education offer community development as an area of study and research such as the University of Toronto, Leiden University, SOAS University of London, and the Balsillie School of International Affairs, among others.

; focuses on the role of arts and culture in community development, social transformation[6]

Arts, Culture, and Development

; focuses on relationships at the core of facilitating "understanding and evaluation, involvement, exchange of information and opinions, about a concept, issue or project, with the aim of building social capital and enhancing social outcomes through decision-making” (p. 173).[7]

Community Engagement

; focusing on the contribution of women in settlement groups.[8]

Women Self-help Group

Community ; focusing on helping communities obtain, strengthen, and maintain the ability to set and achieve their own development objectives.[9]

capacity building

; an adult education and social psychology approach grounded in the activity of the individual and the social psychology of the large group focusing on large groups of unemployed or semi-employed participants, many of whom with Lower Levels of Literacy (LLLs).

Large Group Capacitation

formation; focusing on benefits derived from the cooperation between individuals and groups.

Social capital

; when a group of people take action to reveal an existing problem, highlight an alternative, or demonstrate a possible solution to a social issue which is not being addressed through traditional societal institutions (governments, religious organizations or established trade unions) to the satisfaction of the direct action participants.

Nonviolent direct action

, focusing on the "development" of developing countries as measured by their economies, although it includes the processes and policies by which a nation improves the economic, political, and social well-being of its people.

Economic development

Community economic development

; which seeks to achieve, in a balanced manner, economic development, social development and environmental protection outcomes.[12]

Sustainable development

(CDD), an economic development model which shifts overreliance on central governments to local communities.

Community-driven development

(ABCD); is a methodology that seeks to uncover and use the strengths within communities as a means for sustainable development.[13]

Asset-based community development

Faith-based community development; which utilizes faith-based organizations to bring about community development outcomes.

[14]

(CBPR); a partnership approach to research that equitably involves, for example, community members, organizational representatives, and researchers in all aspects of the research process and in which all partners contribute expertise and share decision making and ownership, which aims to integrate this knowledge with community development outcomes.[15][16]

Community-based participatory research

; an approach that generally assumes that social change necessarily involves conflict and social struggle in order to generate collective power for the powerless.

Community organizing

including community-based planning (CBP); involving the entire community in the strategic and management processes of urban planning; or, community-level planning processes, urban or rural.[17][18]

Participatory planning

Town-making; or machizukuri (まちづくり) refers to a Japanese concept which is "an umbrella term generally understood as citizen participation in the planning and management of a living environment". It can include redevelopment, revitalization, and post-disaster reconstruction, and usually emphasizes the importance of local citizen participation. In recent years, cooperation between local communities and contents tourism (such as video games, anime, and manga) has also become a key driver of machizukuri in some local communities, such as the tie-up between CAPCOM's Sengoku Basara and the city of Shiroishi.[20]

[19]

focuses on the use of a language so that it serves the needs of a community. This may involve the creation of books, films and other media in the language. These actions help a small language community to preserve their language and culture.[21]

Language revitalization

Methodologies focusing on the educational component of community development, including the community-wide empowerment that increased educational opportunity creates.

Methodologies addressing the issues and challenges of the , making affordable training and access to computers and the Internet, addressing the marginalisation of local communities that cannot connect and participate in the global Online community. In the United States, nonprofit organizations such as Per Scholas seek to “break the cycle of poverty by providing education, technology and economic opportunities to individuals, families and communities” as a path to development for the communities they serve.[22]

Digital divide

There are numerous overlapping approaches to community development. Some focus on the processes, some on the outcomes/ objectives. They include:


There are a myriad of job titles for community development workers and their employers include public authorities and voluntary or non-governmental organisations, funded by the state and by independent grant making bodies. Since the nineteen seventies the prefix word 'community' has also been adopted by several other occupations from the police and health workers to planners and architects, who have been influenced by community development approaches.

programs, drawing on the work of Brazilian educator Paulo Freire and the "Each One Teach One" adult literacy teaching method conceived by Frank Laubach.

Adult literacy

Youth and women's groups, following the work of the of Botswana, of Patrick van Rensburg.

Serowe Brigades

Development of and particularly cooperatives, in part drawn on the examples of José María Arizmendiarrieta and the Mondragon Cooperatives of the Basque region of Spain

community business ventures

for those missing out in the formal education system, drawing on the work of Open Education as pioneered by Michael Young.

Compensatory education

Dissemination of , based upon the work of E. F. Schumacher as advocated in his book Small Is Beautiful: A Study of Economics As If People Mattered

alternative technologies

Village nutrition programs and projects, based upon the work of Australians Bill Mollison and David Holmgren.

permaculture

programs

Village water supply

Towards Shared International Standards for Community Development Practice. IACD. 2018

– A large collection practices and activities for citizens' groups

The Citizens' Handbook

– US organization that promotes partnerships between government and citizens' groups

National Civic League

 – A nonprofit magazine on community development, affordable housing, and neighborhood stabilization.

Shelterforce