Towards theory building for the neighbourhood community development practice in Hong Kong : the case study of the Mount Davis Community Development Project, July 1978- June 1984

1984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lai-wan, Cecilia Chan

Community Information and Action Centre, Report: Assessment and Recommendations from a Community Development Project in West Cumbria, 1975. 105 pp. 65p Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - Lewis Corina, Local Government Decision Making: Some Influences on Elected Members' Role Flaying, 1975. 39 pp. £1.00 Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - Robert Sugden, Unskilled and Unemployed in West Cumbria: A Study of Unemployment in Relation to Economic Planning and Public Transportatton Policies, 1975. 51 pp. £1.00 Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - Hugh Butcher, Ian Cole and Andrew Glen, Information and Action Services for Rural Areas: A Case Study in West Cumbria, 1976. 79 pp. £1.20 Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - J. Bradshaw, P. Taylor-Gooby and R. Lees, The Batley Welfare Benefits Project, 1976. 33 pp. £1.00 Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - Morag McGrath, Batley East and West: A CDP Survey, 1976. iv + 62 pp. £1.20 Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - Lewis Corina, Housing Allocation Policy and Its Effects: A Case-Study from Oldham Community Development Project, 1976. 66 pp. £1.20 Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York; - Neil Shenton, Deneside – A Council Estate, 1976. 40 pp. £1.00, all published by the Department of Social Administration and Social Work, University of York, Papers in Community Studies nos 1–8.

1977 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 508-509
Author(s):  
William Hampton

Author(s):  
Ana Margarida Esteves

Abstract This article explores an understudied dimension of Solidarity Economy, which is how spaces of community development-oriented commercialization balance the embedment of their activities in cooperative norms and practices, while at the same time mobilizing support from mainstream society and its institutions. The analysis is based on the case study of the Solidarity Economy markets organized by Esperança/Cooesperança, a community development project based in the town of Santa Maria, in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul. It engages the concept of “edge work”, from Social Permaculture Design, in framing Solidarity Economy markets as spaces that manifest Karl Polanyi’s vision of an “active society” in counter-movement to market commodification. This materializes as a reconciliation of cooperative practices with market mechanisms, based on trust-building and political mobilization, among different social sectors and agents, around direct producer-to-consumer exchanges. The analysis frames these markets as “mobilizational commons”: Sites of re-signification of market activity through the engagement of otherwise competing producers in experimenting, enacting and coordinating cooperative practices, as well as of consumers, social movements and the state in the re-framing economic activity over time. It concludes with an analysis of the political limitations to the “edge work” promoted by Esperança/Cooesperança, posed by electoral rotation and political socialization, as well as the suggestion to frame further research on this topic in the context of structural power relations.


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