Community Organizing and Community Building for HealthMeredith Minkler Rutgers University Press, 1997 - 407 pages As public health problems such as HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, violence, and environmental toxins become an ever greater part of our national landscape, grassroots public health work has become all the more important. This updated and revised edition of a highly praised volume provides meaningful insights into the systems of inequality in the United States--such as race, class, and gender--that impact health. Updated versions of a number of the original chapters, as well as new chapters and appendixes, address areas such as using community organizing to impact on policy; using the arts in community building and organizing; online activism; and the role of cultural humility and systems change in building effective partnerships between local health departments and community residents. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 89
Page 54
... Community - based social action , however , is not a static phenomenon . Social action is always changing in response to the conditions and opportunity structures in which it operates . In the 1980s , for example , one hallmark of community ...
... Community - based social action , however , is not a static phenomenon . Social action is always changing in response to the conditions and opportunity structures in which it operates . In the 1980s , for example , one hallmark of community ...
Page 57
... community capacity building to target and make claims against the public sector . They see the future of community - based social action as interdependent with political and economic changes outside their communities . They understand ...
... community capacity building to target and make claims against the public sector . They see the future of community - based social action as interdependent with political and economic changes outside their communities . They understand ...
Page 96
... based and community develop- ment approaches to our work . The distinction lies in who sets the agenda and who names the issue or problem ( see Table 6.1 ) ... Community - based and Community Development Programming Community 96 RONALD LABONTE.
... based and community develop- ment approaches to our work . The distinction lies in who sets the agenda and who names the issue or problem ( see Table 6.1 ) ... Community - based and Community Development Programming Community 96 RONALD LABONTE.
Contents
Health Systems | 20 |
Contextual Frameworks and Models | 27 |
Proliferation Persistence Roots and Prospects 333 | 53 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
activities agencies agenda Alinsky approach ASAP assets behavior campaign capacity Center challenge chapter coalition community assessment community building practice community competence community development community groups community health community members community organizing community participation community planning community-based concept conflict create critical critical consciousness cultural effective empowering empowerment evaluation ethical example facilitators focus force field analysis Freirian funding goals grassroots Health Education Quarterly health promotion HIV prevention identify important individual initiatives involved issues Journal Labonte lead poisoning leaders leadership low-income mass media media advocacy Minkler mobilization munity needs neighborhood orga organizational organizing and community participatory action research perspective political potential Press problems programs Public Health residents role Saul Alinsky skills social action social change professionals STOP AIDS strategies Tenderloin tion TSOP University W. K. Kellogg Foundation Wallerstein Wandersman women of color yes no yes York