Engaging the Community in Decision Making

Case Studies Tracking Participation, Voice and Influence

$35.00

In stock

SKU: 9780786443123 Categories: , , ,

About the Book

In recent years, the rapidly growing field of community participation has promised to give people formerly excluded from decision making an influential voice about issues that affect their lives. Inclusive processes implemented in the United States and internationally have certainly given community members new opportunities to participate and be involved, but how effective are these processes in promoting the voice and influence of the people who have historically been excluded the most—the poorest, least educated, and most marginalized residents in communities? Of the various participants who have “a seat at the table,” whose voices are influential, whose aren’t, and why?

This book summarizes how five community partnerships, working with a team of researchers, attempted to answer these critical questions. Investigating 10 cases—two from each community partnership—the study tracks the ideas of everyone involved and reveals how and why the ideas of marginalized and ordinary residents were far less likely to be influential than those of people with more clout, resources, or acknowledged expertise. Finally, the authors explain how and why these influence inequities can be overcome, providing readers with practical, evidence-based tools to help them do so. The book should be helpful to readers involved in any form of active community participation, from participatory research to civic engagement, deliberative democracy, and community initiatives. Instructors considering this book for use in a course may request an examination copy here.

About the Author(s)

Roz Diane Lasker is a physician known internationally for her work on public participation in community planning, policy development and problem solving. She holds an appointment as clinical professor of public health at Columbia University’s School of Public Health and, for over a decade, she directed the Division of Public Health and the Center for the Advancement of Collaborative Strategies in Health at The New York Academy of Medicine. She lives in New York City.

John A. Guidry, a political scientist from Brooklyn, worked with Dr. Roz Lasker from 2004 through 2008, during which time the research for this book was completed.

Bibliographic Details

Roz Diane Lasker and John A. Guidry

Format: softcover (7 x 10)
Pages: 247
Bibliographic Info: photos, notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2009
pISBN: 978-0-7864-4312-3
eISBN: 978-0-7864-5279-8
Imprint: McFarland

Table of Contents

Preface      1

Introduction: Are We Actually Doing What We Want to Be Doing?      5

Case Narratives

1. Community Voices Against Violence in Cass Lake, Minnesota      21

2. Housing for Single Mothers in Humboldt Park, Chicago      40

3. A “Poor Man’s Bank” in the Southeast Oklahoma Enterprise Community      54

4. A Workforce Alliance Minigrant Program in the Mississippi Delta      68

5. The Community Leadership Team of Story County, Iowa      80

6. Developing a Professionalization Curriculum in the Mississippi Delta      93

7. Revitalizing Cass Lake, Minnesota      108

8. Community Centers in Southeastern Oklahoma      123

9. The Incorporation of Beyond Welfare in Ames, Iowa      141

10. Saving a Mural in Humboldt Park, Chicago      156

Cross-Case Analysis

11. The Pathway of Ideas      170

Application to Practice

12. Realizing the Promise of Community Participation      200

Chapter Notes      221

References      231

Index      237

Book Reviews & Awards

“Marvelous book…valuable…the authors are well versed in current community engagement processes…fascinating reading”—Journal of Planning Education and Research.