Publication | Closed Access
The Construction Of The Local And The Limits Of Contemporary Community Building In The United States
70
Citations
49
References
2003
Year
EducationUnited StatesSocial SciencesUrban SocietyCommunity BuildingCommunity GeographyPublic PolicyUrban PolicyCivil SocietyCommunity EngagementNeighborhood ResidentsUrban PlanningCommunity DevelopmentCommunity EnvironmentCommunity OrganizingContemporary Community BuildingSociologyCommunity PlanningCommunity StudiesUrban Space
With new relationships between state and civil society, community building has arisen as a preferred mechanism to ameliorate urban poverty. Community building is a much-supported but undercriticized paradigm, especially with respect to questions about the benefits that impoverished neighborhood residents actually acquire from these initiatives. The authors examine community building as a process that is related to larger agendas meant to enact certain productions of urban space and challenge many taken-for-granted notions about the realized benefits of this form of antipoverty work. Moreover, they argue that community-building initiatives occur in an increasingly globalized context, providing opportunities for stakeholders other than residents to promote certain productions of space and place. A case study is presented of an initiative occurring in a southern city in the United States to highlight the theoretical framework presented.
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