| Literature DB >> 27761059 |
Marcello Bertotti1, Faye Adams-Eaton2, Kevin Sheridan3, Adrian Renton4.
Abstract
The notion of community has been central to the political project of renewal of New Labour in the UK. The paper explores how the discourses of community are framed within New Labour and discusses these in the light of the results from research which focuses on how people within urban deprived areas construct their community. It draws upon the results of one part of a larger research project (the 'Well London' programme) which aimed to capture the views of residents from 20 disadvantaged neighbourhoods throughout London using an innovative qualitative method known as the 'World Café'. Our results show the centrality of young people to the development of cohesive communities, the importance of building informal relationships between residents alongside encouraging greater participation to policy making, and the need to see these places as fragile and temporary locations but with considerable social strengths. Government policies are only partially addressing these issues. They pay greater attention to formally encouraging citizens to become more involved in policy making, largely ignore the contribution young people could make to the community cohesion agenda, and weakly define the shared norms and values that are crucial in building cohesive communities. Thus, the conclusion is that whilst an emphasis of the government on 'community' is to be welcome, more needs to be done in terms of considering the 'voices' of the community as well as enabling communities to determine and act upon their priorities.Entities:
Keywords: Community cohesion; community development; community participation; disadvantaged neighbourhoods; social capital
Year: 2009 PMID: 27761059 PMCID: PMC5066839 DOI: 10.1007/s10708-009-9326-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GeoJournal ISSN: 0343-2521