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Program Outcomes for
Communities
Citizen
Development
Citizen Participation: An Essay on Applications of Citizen Participation
to Extension Programming
Fred Schmidt Director
Center for Rural Studies
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
University of Vermont
May 8, 1998
Table of Contents
Introduction
Why Citizen Participation?
A Comment on Organizing Participation Techniques
Contemporary Thinking in the Citizen Participation Arena
Synthesis and Emergent Themes
Introduction
This essay is written in order to introduce youth and family advocates
to the arena of community development. Influenced by the Masai belief
that it takes an entire village to raise a child, we seek here to share
some contemporary thinking in community with those more traditionally
inclined to focus upon individual youth, family and/or client based neighborhood
organization. We feel that extension and kindred outreach human service
personnel must become more familiar with the new thinking emerging in
the area of citizen participation.
The nineties have been a decade of transition and change in all of the
policy and applied social sciences. Concern for individual participation
in group, workplace and community organization, long dominated by social
psychologists and human relations experts, has been shaken from a limited,
theoretical focus under new challenges from political scientists, social
activists and advocates who are committed to 1) building capacity among
the citizenry, 2) community empowerment and, more globally, 3) building
a more decentralized society. Recent thinking epitomized by the work of
Kretzman and McKnight challenges traditional limits by emphasizing an
assets based approach to community analysis. So too, the critical observations
of Harvard's Robert Putnam regarding the decline of civic culture, further
stimulate contemporary thinking in the area of citizen participation and
involvement, an action and research arena that is changing as we speak.
This essay will examine reasons for reinvigorating our concerns for citizen
participation, will just touch upon an overview of techniques, will provide
a brief examination of contemporary trends in the 1990s and finally will
attempt to analyze contextual features conducive to enhanced collaboration
among extension personnel, kindred youth and family professionals and
citizen participation.
Why Citizen Participation?
Involvement in public decision-making is the major goal of citizen participation.
According to Heberlein (1976), increasing demand for public involvement
is a matter of trust in government. "Concern for participation arises
almost entirely in the context of real or imagined failure of government
to respond appropriately to the more competitive needs and demands of
citizens..." (p. 1). Summers (1987) defines citizen participation as "the
active involvement of citizens outside the electoral process in making
decisions affecting their lives" (p.16). Arnstein (1969) refers to citizen
participation as "a categorical term for citizen power. It is the redistribution
of power that enables the have-not citizens, presently excluded from the
political and economic processes, to be deliberately included in the future
(p. 216). Clearly there is some disagreement in the literature regarding
just when citizen participation includes activity in electoral process.
In our work here, we side with Heberlein and Arnstein, recognizing that
the implication for citizen participation in electoral process is appropriately
rooted in an individual's concern for policy and, related program implementation.
From an extension program perspective, an important characteristic
of citizen participation is the education required in responding to concern
for making appropriate policy related decisions. We will argue that it
is the call for information required in selecting from among policy/program
alternatives that represents the much vaulted "teachable moment" sought
after by extension outreach and other adult educators.
Heberlein (1976) views pubic participation as a way of reaching "better
decisions." By making the manager and planner aware of the range of alternatives,
and by not leaving out or alienating groups (who, if ignored, will resort
to traditional political and legal mechanisms to make their wishes known),
better decisions will be made (p. 3)." And so on. The implication is clear:
citizen involvement in this process is paramount to an incrementally improving
system. The implications of this improvement, i.e. the introduction of
a cumulative, progressively "better" process, reflects the basic optimism
inherent in the American polity. In fact, this optimism may be misplaced.
However, this essay, with its emphasis upon definition and elaboration,
will not undertake an argument in defensive of the bias toward perfection.
Suffice it to say that citizen participation is a part of an evolutionary
social process which aims at political and social egalitarianism and is
at the very core of the great American democratic experiment (Swell and
O'Riordan, 1976). Just how much "better" in a value sense this changing
process becomes is the subject for other discussions.
The emphasis upon citizen participation as part of an evolving, political
process is the critical link between citizen participation thinking and
that of community development. It is extremely important that those involved
in extension programming and program implementation understand the relationship
between these two, sometimes disparate activity areas. Why is this rapprochement
so important?
Three contemporary factors encourage this convergence: reduced resources,
the telecommunications challenge, and changing roles of extension specialist
and agent. The pressure from reduced resources is obvious. The pressure
to separate the extension messenger from the specialist's message has
come primarily via rapidly improving telecommunication but actually began
when print media first challenged the time-honored rural, face-to-face
and "hands-on," informal exchange of information. These twin pressures
have simply forced traditional program areas into greater collaboration.
The third obstacle facing collaborators lies in the potential internal
schism between extension specialist and extension outreach worker. Increasing
research and professional responsibilities upon the often campus based
specialist stretch the delivery of appropriate information to an impatient,
besieged action-oriented field agent. It is paramount that a better understanding
of programmatic themes be gained. One way to improve our grasp of these
themes is to understand a bit about the conceptual underpinnings of community.
A programmatic concern for citizen participation becomes one critical
link among the evolving focus of extension upon 4-H, youth, youth at risk,
family discipline, family management, family nutrition, life quality,
domestic planning and the community cradling much of these program activities.
Thus citizen participation becomes the "process" link between a variety
of recognized youth and family program themes and the community. Many
would recognize changes in approach from any of the theme areas as community
development. Consider for a moment some of the thinking about community
development as critical to the understanding conceptual underpinnings
for citizen participation. We aren't alone in this attempt to wrestle
critical, unifying themes from a disparate literature. Jim Christenson
and Jerry Robinson, editors of a classic community development text (1989)
include two introductory chapters where a struggle to concisely define
community development is reflected. In Chapter I., the authors identify
a primary goal of community ("to help people improve their social and
economic situations) and then present some "major concepts:" community,
development, intervention, community development and community development
in a world economy. Of less utility but better organized, the authors
identify "Four Ways of Viewing Community Development (p.13); the four
ways are 1) as a process, 2) as a method, 3) as a program and 4) as a
movement.
Returning to greater simplicity, these authors present a 1963 United Nations'
definition of community development. It is illustrative of the definition
problems: "the process by which the efforts of the people themselves
are united with those of governmental authorities to improve the economic,
social and cultural conditions of communities, to integrate these communities
into the life of the nation, and to enable them to contribute fully to
national progress. This complex of processes is, therefore, made up of
two essential elements: the participation by the people themselves in
efforts to improve their level of living, with as much reliance as possible
on their own initiative; and the provision of technical and other services
in ways which encourage initiative, self-help and mutual help and make
these more effective. It is expressed in programs designed to achieve
a wide variety of specific improvements."
Reconsider the UN definition's first essential element, "the participation
by the people themselves in efforts to improve their level of living,
with as much reliance as possible on their own initiative." And next,
please note the second essential element "the provision of technical
and other services in ways which encourage initiative, self-help and mutual
help and make these more effective." These two elements resonate throughout
the community development "approach" and inherently illustrate the inseparability
of citizen participation and community development.
However, two tenants (or operating principles) hardly constitute a comprehensive
theoretical approach bearing conceptual potential. The specialist seeking
greater articulation of a community development conceptual framework,
notes that to this point a quest for an overarching paradigm for both
community development and citizen participation has be stymied by the
fact that it is at what Thomas Kuhn has called a "pre-paradigmatic" state.
Simply, Kuhn recognizes that the policy sciences are in their infancy
and an overarching explanatory framework is premature. Recognizing that
this is the case with community development, one of the newest and most
disparate of approaches, the conceptual quest may be best served by backing
away from the academy per se and turning, instead, to some of the prevailing
ground rules of the society in which we function. A logical institutional
area to consult in these United States would be our "polity," the particular,
unique form or system of government. Paralleling our economy (the system
of resource management in a society with an eye to production and distribution
of goods and services), the polity provides vital guidelines for citizen
participation.
Our polity, nominally labeled a representative democracy
is guided by a constitution and, especially, by a Bill of Rights (see
Figure 1. below). Although contentious and under constant scrutiny, guidance
from this sources is far more clearly articulated and concise than the
concomitant body of thought characterizing our economic system. The Bill
of Rights has the distinct advantage of being reflected in a single location.
It is in this body of thought that can provide a logical and instructive
framework for placing citizen participation and community development
in a paradigmatic context. The point here is that our concern in community
development is to create the infrastructure by which a community (in both
its private and public decision making) can make decisions in a way that
involves the entire community and thus guarantees collective responsibility.
It is in that context of striving for the best decision for the collective
that an educator can effectively intervene with the best, most current
information at hand - identified above as the "teachable moment" - and
it is here that those concerned with citizen participation (or consumer
education for that matter) can most effectively intervene. After all,
the principle grounding the two essential elements in the UN definition
are that the individual citizen be involved in the decision making as
THE SINGLE guarantee that those citizens responsible for decision making
are responsible for the outcomes of those decisions. The U.S. Constitution,
and more particularly, the Bill of Rights serves us well in a focused
attempt to articulate a unifying set of ground rules underlying our own
emerging "discipline" of community development. The Bill of Rights, serves
as an accessible paradigm for our quest for an embracing set of propositions
and assumptions underlying a community development approach. There are,
of course, other amendments to the Constitution that collectively provide
an action paradigm encompassing citizen participation. In our search for
theoretical models, it is critical to keep in view the fact that one most
appropriate paradigmatic framework includes the very ground rules of the
society in which we live. There is no intention here to suggest that these
"living" rules are simplistic, or, for that matter, static. Each amendment
is subject to constant scrutiny. Inclusion of this figure serves to alert
both the specialist and the program activist that ours is a program area
with great depth. A far ranging series of finding has been forthcoming
from researchers regarding the impact of implementing democratic citizen
participation techniques. Although it is not the intent of the present
discussion to systematically review all relevant research findings from
the behavioral and policy sciences, one generalization characterizing
our application of those techniques of citizen participation at a community
level most in keeping with the ground rules of a political democracy,
is that shared responsibility for critical local decisions tends to hold
the system together. Simply put, if you are a part of the decision making
process (or "think you are a part of it"), you are less likely to overthrow
the decision makers. Classic words from the comic strip, Pogo, "we have
met the enemy and it is us," serve us well as a principle governing public
response to an unsuccessful decision involving a satisfactory number of
a community's citizens.
Figure 1. BILL OF RIGHTS
Articles selected with direct relevance to citizen participation and community
development. (Original text/Modern interpretation)
Article I - Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibition the free exercise thereof; or abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press; of the right of the people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
"The free exchange of ideas..." as long as those ideas don't present a
"clear and present danger" contain obscenity or other such content. Today
we are encouraged to think freely but, that which we chose to share must
be somewhat censored so as not to "offend" or place another in danger.
Article IV - The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures,
shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable
cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the
place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. - Security
from invasion from by the state . Each individual is entitled to privacy.
If there is sufficient reason to conduct a search the proper channels
must be pursued. The authorities do not have the right to conduct a search
just based on a hunch.
Article V - - No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise
infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury,
except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia,
when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any
person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of
life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty or property, without
due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use
without just compensation. It has come to mean not just playing by
the rules but activity ensuring liberty and justice. The backbone of the
Bill of Rights, article V protects us from the legal system which convicts
us. It allows for unarguably guilty criminals to check the government
and its workers to ensure that they are correctly carrying out their responsibilities,
without over-stepping their boundaries. It gives the citizen power over
their own life.
Article VII - In suits at common law, where the value in controversy
shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved,
and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise re-examined an any court
of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
- The industrialization and mass communication has allowed for more people
to get a hold of information and use it to their benefit the same time
those who had information the accused, have the right to have a trial
by jury civil cases. Grievances concerning things such as who stole another's
patent or how much money should be paid for emotional traumas.
Article IX - The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights
shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
- This article is one of the amendments which alludes the issue of privacy.
There is no amendment which specifically states that individuals have
a fundamental right to privacy. However this article implies that individuals
have the right to do as he/she pleases, without harming others in any
way.
Article X - The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution,
not prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively,
or to the people. - This simply allows States to have certain separate
powers. This has advantages and disadvantages; advantages-- distributing
power/control; disadvantages-- allows for conflict among federal and state
government.
Source: Used as a class handout in Sociology 218 Community Development,
University of Vermont. Adapted from a Bicentennial Issue of Life Magazine,
July, 1976 p 9 and ff.
A Comment on Organizing Participation Techniques
Extension programming is replete with citizen participation techniques.
From the needs assessment materials through those dealing with conflict
management (see especially the many materials generated and distributed
by the Regional Rural Development Centers), techniques of citizen empowerment
are easily accessible and most have been carefully field-tested. Classifying
or making some order of the materials is, in and of itself, a matter that
a number of people have struggled with. In the following, brief overview,
the work of Kevin Wiberg (1992) has been extensively consulted.
Arnstein (1969) likens varying "degrees" of citizen participation to rungs
on a ladder (a continuum). At the bottom of the ladder are therapy and
manipulation - referred to as degrees of non-participation - where those
in positions of power try to "educate" or "cure" the public. We would
assume that most of the citizen participation techniques at this end of
the continuum are not those that one would typically associate with the
more democratic principles, but their implementation may well be with
the consent of the participants. Further on the ladder one finds tokenism,
a situation or technique series where citizens are informed or placated.
At this level, citizens are afforded opportunities to participate and
express opinions and even concerns. Clearly, even at these stages along
the technique ladder-like continuum, participants are not empowered and
lack a voice in the decision-making process. At the more democratic end
of this continuum of techniques we identity degrees of citizen power which
include partnership, delegated power and finally, citizen control. According
to Arnstein, at this end of the ladder, a "partnership" enables citizens
to "negotiate and engage in trade-of trade-offs with traditional power
holders". The author feels that at this most empowering end of the continuum,
"Delegated Power" and "Citizen Control," have-not citizens obtain the
majority of decision-making seats or full managerial power" (p. 217).
Reflecting the period in which this useful typology of citizen participation
techniques was conceptualized, the War on Poverty adopted this citizen
control model and incorporated it into the formation and governance of
the Community Action Program(s), a legacy continued into the late 1990s.
Wiberg's review of ways to organize useful citizen participation techniques
(1992) continues to include more work by Heberlein (1976) who identifies
four functions of public involvement: informational, interactive, assurance,
an ritualistic. "In the informational function, the public provides and
receives information. In the interactive function, there is a two-way
sharing of information between the public and the agency (planner or manager).
In the assurance function, the agency assures the public that its views
and opinions have been heard. And, in the ritualistic function, public
participation, such as public hearings, serves to meet legal requirements."
(Wiberg, 1992: p.14). In recent years, a number of classification typologies
have been employed in an effort to organize a growing resource base of
citizen participation techniques. (See for example, lists developed in
the publications of any of the Regional Rural Development Centers, the
ways in which Sage Publications promotes its extensive literature base,
or any of the increasingly familiar (and thus, presumably popular) participatory
workshops conducted by human relations experts associate with continuing
and adult educational efforts or with business management consulting firms.
An effort conducted by this author (and our working committee) to categorize
the more popular and time- honored teaching packages assembled by various
state and inter-state teams of Extension was overwhelmed by the sheer
number of techniques discovered and, coincidentally, the lack of systematic
and critical assessment of their application. Finally, we note that Heberlein,
in the work cited above (1976:19) provides an excellent model for the
evaluation of the utility of citizen participation techniques (Table 1.)
where he reviews over a dozen distinct forms of public involvement.
Contemporary Thinking in the Citizen Participation Arena
Among a variety of contemporary perspectives in the area of citizen participation,
one "school" has emerged with a proactive emphasis upon an assets based
approach. Generally, this literature is characterized by its upbeat, proactive
and structural orientation. Typically, it looks at both the conditions
that effect individual citizens as well as that the capability of individuals
to work together to create better conditions, thus linking it to the collaborative
focus as well. Lofquist (1993) proposes three perspectives: 1) participation,
2) responsibility, and 3) changing conditions. Healthy communities depend
first on citizen participation and investment in local problem-solving
capacities; second upon people taking responsibility for themselves; and
thirdly, upon people working together to create better local conditions,
which in turn enhances a sense of the common good and provides increased
opportunities for personal growth. These theories, he claims, are the
foundation for a healthy democratic society, for good interpersonal relationships,
and for effective community development (Lofquist, 1983).
Much of contemporary citizen participation field practice is built on
similar principles, including a focus upon building relationships, involving
local people in the process, and fully utilizing existing strengths, assets
and capacities of community members. In these ways, asset based community
development and prevention-oriented processes both build healthier, more
sustainable communities, and not coincidentally, these principles also
contribute to building communities with greater stocks of social capital.
Social capital is viewed as an essential ingredient of a positive civic
capacity (Putnam, 1986). The community is one critical arena within which
to nurture children.
A parallel perspective utilizing similar themes is the asset-based community
development emphasis of John McKnight and John Kretzmann (1993). Their
concern is with community capacity building and their definition of community
attempts to establish a common understanding of this complex concept.
Community is "the social place used by family, friends, neighbors, neighborhood
associations, clubs, civic groups, local enterprises, churches, ethnic
associations, temples, local unions, local government, and local media"
(McKnight, 1995: p. 164). A community of associations (collaborating organizations)
according to McKnight and Kretzmann (1993) is one key to building healthy
communities. Healthy communities and healthy families create a self-strengthening
bond. McKnight and Kretzmann (1993) describe three interrelated characteristics
which define "asset-based community development:" 1. It begins with what
is present in the community, including the capacities of the members,
people who work there, as well as the associations and organizational
base, not what is absent, problematic or "needed". 2. This process is
internally focused; i.e., it concentrates on the agenda building and problem
solving capacities of local residents, associations and organizations.
3. Asset based community development needs to be relationship driven;
in other words, a critical focus for community development work must be
on the relationships between and among local residents, associations and
organizations.
While McKnight and Kretzmann (1993) argue that communities need external
resources to assist them with their efforts, all communities (and their
organizations and individual members) possess significant assets which
can be mobilized and utilized. This assets based approach, the authors
feel, is particularly important in the approach to citizen participation
in low income communities where the tradition has been to begin with deficits
rather than strengths. These authors take the needs assessment folks head
on, stressing the critical point of starting with a positive assessment
of existing capacity as opposed to gaps, or deficiencies. Some call this
the just say "yes" approach. Dr. Spock lives on as theorists, rooted in
the 1960s, apply child rearing perspectives to community structure.) McKnight
and Kretzmann (1992) have broken down assets and capacities into three
categories.
The first of these are considered primary building blocks, assets which
are located in the community and are controlled by its members (includes
skills of community members and local businesses, forms of human and social
capital). The second category they call secondary building blocks. These
are assets not currently under community control but which can be brought
under its control. Subsequently they can be used for community-building
purposes (e.g. private and non-profit institutions and services). The
third category McKnight and Kretzmann (1993) refer to as potential building
blocks. (Here again we see that from an individual level of analysis,
a whole school of contemporary action researchers have moved the assets
based focus into "resiliency factors" as an assessment tool for working
with disadvantaged individuals, most frequently, children. While the focus
upon children not particularly relevant to this discussion - which has
assumed that we are talking primarily about adult citizens - it is noteworthy
in that much of extension's youth and family programming focus has been
influenced by the resiliency focus. Of course we can't lose sight of the
fact that today's children are tomorrow's adults; children and adults
are, of course, citizens. The common dimension here is the building of
social capital, be it "learning healthy social skills" or "finding positive
role models" which can pay off as more self-sufficient, well-centered,
participating citizens of the future.
Collaborative community efforts are constructive responses to creating
caring communities and expanding the safety net for children, youth and
families. The goal of community collaboration is to bring individuals
and members of communities, agencies and organizations together in an
atmosphere of support to systematically solve existing and emerging problems
that could not be solved by one group alone. The community collaborative
framework is an exhaustive model grounded in assumptions regarding diversity
and focused upon collaborative, shared visions. It has systematically
identified six contextual "process factors" and six contextual factors
at large (Bergstrom, et. al., 1995:2). This model focuses contextual factors,
diversity and vision upon impact measures at varying levels of analysis
and lying in six specific fields of community concern: public safety,
education, economic well-being, family support, health and environment.
Although the systematic application of this framework is in its infancy,
the work of Bergstrom and his colleagues represents a rare effort among
extension specialists to pull real world experience into a cohesive theoretical
framework. While this collaborative model draws from earlier work in cooperative
and coalition building processes, and has been applied to many of the
community issues of concern identified by the other groups and inherently
provides a framework for a rich variety of techniques enhancing the arsenal
of citizen participants. Because of the emphasis upon inter-organizational
relations, teaching materials emerging from the collaboration framework
are socio-genic in their focus (deal with organizational and community
structure) rather than psycho-genic (reductionist foci of the self-improvement
genre).
Again, we note that the simple belief of the East African Masai, "it takes
a village to raise a child," has become the cliche symbolizing a decade
of changing thinking in human and especially, child development and family
counseling. Similarly, the psycho-social schools providing the conceptual
underpinning in approaching substance abuse prevention have increasingly
emphasized an emphasis upon using the community to provide a positive,
non-abusive environment for youth (and elders for that matter), stressing
participation and social activities in lieu of destructive, isolationist
behaviors.
Synthesis and Emergent Themes
In sharing this perspective, it is clear that each of the applied perspectives
embraces Putnam and his work on civic culture. McKnight, for example,
goes directly to a key source for Putnam, Alexis De Tocqueville. De Tocqueville,
stimulated by his travels in the United States during the 1830's, pondered,
"How happens it that every one takes as zealous an interest in the affairs
of his township, his county, and the whole State, as if they were his
own?" (De Tocqueville, 1835/1984, p.104). McKnight (1992) credits De Tocqueville
with identifying three steps in citizen problem solving: 1) groups of
citizens decide they had the power to decide what a problem was; 2) they
decided they had the power to decide how to solve the problem; and 3)
they decided they would themselves become the key actors in implementing
the solution. This process emphasizes the strengths, assets, and capacities
of local citizens and can only take place when community members are involved
in local decision-making activities. Associations, both formal and informal
provided the context in 19th century America for citizens to participate
in these activities. These characteristics impressed De Tocqueville and
the legacy they represent in contemporary America excites Putnam, McKnight,
and most of the other action framework discussed here. McKnight and Kretzmann
(1993) in particular elaborate upon the types of civic skills and social
capital necessary to "build communities from the inside out." Lofquist's
prevention model focuses on the strengths and assets of community members
and community associations, and seeks to build community well-being with
the four principles identified above as a foundation. Putnam's theory
of social capital establishes important links between civic participation
and community well-being which supports Lofquist's prevention theory and
strategies; and McKnight and Kretzmann's capacity-building model offers
a theoretical construct consistent with Lofquist's prevention framework
as well as with Putnam's concept of social theory.
The dominant common characteristic emerging from these perspectives is
the emphasis upon context, or environment. Specifically, they all reference
context or environment in terms of the immediate social community in which
their clients reside. Despite a marked tendency to refer to only the generic
community, a common perspective links them all to a serious, sustained
focus upon community level intervention as one most effective means to
impact their clients. We will turn in a final consideration of the implications
of this community focus in conclusion to this paper, but the clear message
to those of us interested in community capacity building, sustainable
community, civic culture and social capital, is that each of these applied
perspectives is speaking our language.
A second theme is the explicit emphasis upon the strengths represented
by human diversity. Notably, communal diversity (other than community
differences in social class) has not been a major focus in assessing citizen
participation. However, ethnic, racial and certain physical and gender
diversity is, by inference, treated by the emerging paradigms as representing
a community resource. The emphasis appears to be upon participatory "inclusiveness".
This emphasis appears to be good political strategy in action perspectives
espousing to empower participants. However, it undoubtedly represents
a recognition of the greater diversity of "need" to which communities
are expected to respond. In addition to a burgeoning elderly population,
American communities have been formally charged (by a federal government
in the process of decentralizing) with new categories of need in recent
decades. Crack babies, fetal alcohol syndrome children, children bearing
children and AIDs victims, all represent here-to-fore, unarticulated concerns.
Certainly these represent new challenges to citizen participants, both
in the areas of collaborative inclusion of typically excluded citizens,
and in the programmatic content and quality with the community responds.
This may represent a Pandora's Box of diversity which, when coupled with
persistent environmental issues, will sorely tax citizen optimism. On
the other hand, it may be that only through local mobilization can solutions
emerge.
A third principle emerging from the perspectives here is the recognition
of the need to fully mobilize community resources as an integral part
of the solution to need. Local determination and control are seen as part
of the solution to the alienation leading to damaging individual behaviors
as well as behavior threatening and taxing the community. Community wide
mobilization is more likely to be effective if channeled and goal oriented.
Therein, the need for greater civic culture and social capital is recognized
as representing expandable, renewable, sustainable, and environmental
benign resources.
A final common focus emerging from the new orientation to
assets based community development is an emphasis upon program accountability
and evaluation. Re-emphasizing the point that public participation may
involve a quest for new knowledge (the aforementioned "teachable moment"),
a generally recognized emphasis upon measurement has accompanied concerns
for accountability. In the first instance, the emphasis upon assets has
had community leaders scrambling to better understand economic and democratic
indicators as "benchmarks" capable of reflecting change created by the
activities engaged and set in motion by citizen participants. Now, while
generating data for communities is a useful exercise, it must be accompanied
by a strategy that empowers community participants to find and use data
on their own. The emergence of social capital theory has given us a framework
to better organize what has been an eclectic approach to community profiling
of a qualitative nature. Citizen participants can readily identify local
resources, frequently with greater accuracy than the "experts" (see complete
bibliography of materials on citizen research included below). The whole
endeavor clearly parallels the work done by Kretzmann and McKnight in
their assets based community and neighborhood profiling techniques, we
may well decide upon a classification system that follows the social capital
perspective e.g. Natural Resources Capital (including for example, community
pathways, views, good places to hunt, game populations among many others),
Built Resources Capital (landmark buildings, bridges, town water tower,
skating rinks, farmsteads, etc.), Human Capital (heroes, artists, woodworkers,
musicians, and the like) and Social Capital (unusual organizations, cooperatives,
leaders, church group, local units of government, school organizations,
and so on).
A broad variety of activity has been undertaken in this area by community
researchers. Involving citizens in the process, and thus building community
capacity has become a critically important perspective in the 1990s. Both
Rapid Rural Appraisal (RRA) and Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) are
derived from work in development projects in Third World settings, researchers
and practitioners are becoming "impatient" with social surveys. Surveys
not only take a lot of time and manpower to do, but the results are usually
not timely with regard to planning and moving ahead with programmatic
changes that they are supposed to help with the decisions on. In the last
few years, professionals from a number of different disciplines have moved
toward using RRA and PRA techniques because they are quick, cost-effective
and productive techniques of data collection on socio-economic, institutional
and technical aspects of inquiry related to programs for community development.
First written up by Robert Chambers (1985), the techniques actually are
grounded in the earlier work of anthropologists and sociologists whose
use of key informant and participatory observation techniques generate
useful data of a qualitative nature, as well as the work of researchers
in a number of related fields since 1980. These techniques involve scanning
the community, and are similar to yet another technique, the Civic Profile
approach, used by New Hampshire community resource development extension
agents. This technique draws heavily upon citizens perceptions and knowledge
of their community and many ways parallels Take Charge (see below). In
New Hampshire, extension specialists have used the profile approach to
assist the community in identifying keystones and, as appropriate, to
either organize to save or create these key elements of the locale. A
rich variety of materials are emerging from expanded application of Take
Charge, a field action model developed by Janet Ayers and colleagues in
the Mid-west and based upon citizen mobilization to specifically identify
and then address community issues (typically of a structural or economic
nature). Take Charge implicitly assumes that part of citizen taking charge
will involve locally directed research and building an inventory of community
assets, a prior condition preceding citizen action. This model has been
used for over a decade and its manifestation in literally hundreds of
communities warrants further examination as we move to consider building
community capacity through citizen involvement in assessing capacity and
measuring policy and action impacts locally. Materials in our bibliography
here of particular interest are Flora, et. al. (1997), Webler and Tuler
(1996) and Kline and Goodman (1993).
Indeed, the decade of the 1990's has been an exciting time for those engaged
in enhancing our knowledge and application of citizen participation. The
premises with which we approach this area of human endeavor are changing.
These changes suggest a stimulating century before us as extension programming
wrestles with the twin pressures of increased collaboration and enhanced
telecommunication potentials.
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