fbpx
Wikipedia

Community

A community is a social unit (a group of living things) with commonality such as place, norms, religion, values, customs, or identity. Communities may share a sense of place situated in a given geographical area (e.g. a country, village, town, or neighbourhood) or in virtual space through communication platforms. Durable good relations that extend beyond immediate genealogical ties also define a sense of community, important to their identity, practice, and roles in social institutions such as family, home, work, government, society, or humanity at large.[1] Although communities are usually small relative to personal social ties, "community" may also refer to large group affiliations such as national communities, international communities, and virtual communities.[2]

A community of interest gathers at Stonehenge, England, for the summer solstice.

The English-language word "community" derives from the Old French comuneté (Modern French: communauté), which comes from the Latin communitas "community", "public spirit" (from Latin communis, "common").[3]

Human communities may have intent, belief, resources, preferences, needs, and risks in common, affecting the identity of the participants and their degree of cohesiveness.[4]

Perspectives of various disciplines

Archaeology

Archaeological studies of social communities use the term "community" in two ways, paralleling usage in other areas. The first is an informal definition of community as a place where people used to live. In this sense it is synonymous with the concept of an ancient settlement—whether a hamlet, village, town, or city. The second meaning resembles the usage of the term in other social sciences: a community is a group of people living near one another who interact socially. Social interaction on a small scale can be difficult to identify with archaeological data. Most reconstructions of social communities by archaeologists rely on the principle that social interaction in the past was conditioned by physical distance. Therefore, a small village settlement likely constituted a social community and spatial subdivisions of cities and other large settlements may have formed communities. Archaeologists typically use similarities in material culture—from house types to styles of pottery—to reconstruct communities in the past. This classification method relies on the assumption that people or households will share more similarities in the types and styles of their material goods with other members of a social community than they will with outsiders.[5]

Sociology

Ecology

In ecology, a community is an assemblage of populations—potentially of different species—interacting with one another. Community ecology is the branch of ecology that studies interactions between and among species. It considers how such interactions, along with interactions between species and the abiotic environment, affect social structure and species richness, diversity and patterns of abundance. Species interact in three ways: competition, predation and mutualism:

  • Competition typically results in a double negative—that is both species lose in the interaction.
  • Predation involves a win/lose situation, with one species winning.
  • Mutualism sees both species co-operating in some way, with both winning.

The two main types of ecological communities are major communities, which are self-sustaining and self-regulating (such as a forest or a lake), and minor communities, which rely on other communities (like fungi decomposing a log) and are the building blocks of major communities.

 
A simplified example of a community. A community includes many populations and how they interact with each other. This example shows interaction between the zebra and the bush, and between the lion and the zebra, as well as between the bird and the organisms by the water, like the worms.

Semantics

The concept of "community" often has a positive semantic connotation, exploited rhetorically by populist politicians and by advertisers[6] to promote feelings and associations of mutual well-being, happiness and togetherness[7]—veering towards an almost-achievable utopian community.

In contrast, the epidemiological term "community transmission" can have negative implications,[8] and instead of a "criminal community"[9] one often speaks of a "criminal underworld" or of the "criminal fraternity".

Key concepts

Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft

In Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft (1887), German sociologist Ferdinand Tönnies described two types of human association: Gemeinschaft (usually translated as "community") and Gesellschaft ("society" or "association"). Tönnies proposed the GemeinschaftGesellschaft dichotomy as a way to think about social ties. No group is exclusively one or the other. Gemeinschaft stress personal social interactions, and the roles, values, and beliefs based on such interactions. Gesellschaft stress indirect interactions, impersonal roles, formal values, and beliefs based on such interactions.[10]

Sense of community

In a seminal 1986 study, McMillan and Chavis[11] identify four elements of "sense of community":

  1. membership: feeling of belonging or of sharing a sense of personal relatedness,
  2. influence: mattering, making a difference to a group and of the group mattering to its members
  3. reinforcement: integration and fulfillment of needs,
  4. shared emotional connection.
 
To what extent do participants in joint activities experience a sense of community?

A "sense of community index" (SCI) was developed by Chavis and colleagues, and revised and adapted by others. Although originally designed to assess sense of community in neighborhoods, the index has been adapted for use in schools, the workplace, and a variety of types of communities.[12]

Studies conducted by the APPA[who?] indicate that young adults who feel a sense of belonging in a community, particularly small communities, develop fewer psychiatric and depressive disorders than those who do not have the feeling of love and belonging.[13]

Socialization

 
Lewes Bonfire Night procession commemorating 17 Protestant martyrs burnt at the stake from 1555 to 1557

The process of learning to adopt the behavior patterns of the community is called socialization. The most fertile time of socialization is usually the early stages of life, during which individuals develop the skills and knowledge and learn the roles necessary to function within their culture and social environment.[14] For some psychologists, especially those in the psychodynamic tradition, the most important period of socialization is between the ages of one and ten. But socialization also includes adults moving into a significantly different environment where they must learn a new set of behaviors.[15]

Socialization is influenced primarily by the family, through which children first learn community norms. Other important influences include schools, peer groups, people, mass media, the workplace, and government. The degree to which the norms of a particular society or community are adopted determines one's willingness to engage with others. The norms of tolerance, reciprocity, and trust are important "habits of the heart", as de Tocqueville put it, in an individual's involvement in community.[16]

Community development

Community development is often linked with community work or community planning, and may involve stakeholders, foundations, governments, or contracted entities including non-government organisations (NGOs), universities or government agencies to progress the social well-being of local, regional and, sometimes, national communities. More grassroots efforts, called community building or community organizing, seek to empower individuals and groups of people by providing them with the skills they need to effect change in their own communities.[17] These skills often assist in building political power through the formation of large social groups working for a common agenda. Community development practitioners must understand both how to work with individuals and how to affect communities' positions within the context of larger social institutions. Public administrators, in contrast, need to understand community development in the context of rural and urban development, housing and economic development, and community, organizational and business development.

Formal accredited programs conducted by universities, as part of degree granting institutions, are often used to build a knowledge base to drive curricula in public administration, sociology and community studies. The General Social Survey from the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago and the Saguaro Seminar at the Harvard Kennedy School are examples of national community development in the United States. The Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University in New York State offers core courses in community and economic development, and in areas ranging from non-profit development to US budgeting (federal to local, community funds). In the United Kingdom, the University of Oxford has led in providing extensive research in the field through its Community Development Journal,[18] used worldwide by sociologists and community development practitioners.

At the intersection between community development and community building are a number of programs and organizations with community development tools. One example of this is the program of the Asset Based Community Development Institute of Northwestern University. The institute makes available downloadable tools[19] to assess community assets and make connections between non-profit groups and other organizations that can help in community building. The Institute focuses on helping communities develop by "mobilizing neighborhood assets" – building from the inside out rather than the outside in.[20] In the disability field, community building was prevalent in the 1980s and 1990s with roots in John McKnight's approaches.[21][22]

Community building and organizing

 
The anti-war affinity group "Collateral Damage" protesting the Iraq War

In The Different Drum: Community-Making and Peace (1987) Scott Peck argues that the almost accidental sense of community that exists at times of crisis can be consciously built. Peck believes that conscious community building is a process of deliberate design based on the knowledge and application of certain rules.[23] He states that this process goes through four stages:[24]

  1. Pseudocommunity: When people first come together, they try to be "nice" and present what they feel are their most personable and friendly characteristics.
  2. Chaos: People move beyond the inauthenticity of pseudo-community and feel safe enough to present their "shadow" selves.
  3. Emptiness: Moves beyond the attempts to fix, heal and convert of the chaos stage, when all people become capable of acknowledging their own woundedness and brokenness, common to human beings.
  4. True community: Deep respect and true listening for the needs of the other people in this community.

In 1991, Peck remarked that building a sense of community is easy but maintaining this sense of community is difficult in the modern world.[25] An interview with M. Scott Peck by Alan Atkisson. In Context #29, p. 26. The three basic types of community organizing are grassroots organizing, coalition building, and "institution-based community organizing", (also called "broad-based community organizing", an example of which is faith-based community organizing, or Congregation-based Community Organizing).[26]

Community building can use a wide variety of practices, ranging from simple events (e.g., potlucks, small book clubs) to larger-scale efforts (e.g., mass festivals, construction projects that involve local participants rather than outside contractors).

Community building that is geared toward citizen action is usually termed "community organizing".[27] In these cases, organized community groups seek accountability from elected officials and increased direct representation within decision-making bodies. Where good-faith negotiations fail, these constituency-led organizations seek to pressure the decision-makers through a variety of means, including picketing, boycotting, sit-ins, petitioning, and electoral politics.

Community organizing can focus on more than just resolving specific issues. Organizing often means building a widely accessible power structure, often with the end goal of distributing power equally throughout the community. Community organizers generally seek to build groups that are open and democratic in governance. Such groups facilitate and encourage consensus decision-making with a focus on the general health of the community rather than a specific interest group.

If communities are developed based on something they share in common, whether location or values, then one challenge for developing communities is how to incorporate individuality and differences. Rebekah Nathan suggests[according to whom?] in her book, My Freshman Year, we are drawn to developing communities totally based on sameness, despite stated commitments to diversity, such as those found on university websites.

Types of community

 
Participants in Diana Leafe Christian's "Heart of a Healthy Community" seminar circle during an afternoon session at O.U.R. Ecovillage

A number of ways to categorize types of community have been proposed. One such breakdown is as follows:

  1. Location-based Communities: range from the local neighbourhood, suburb, village, town or city, region, nation or even the planet as a whole. These are also called communities of place.
  2. Identity-based Communities: range from the local clique, sub-culture, ethnic group, religious, multicultural or pluralistic civilisation, or the global community cultures of today. They may be included as communities of need or identity, such as disabled persons, or frail aged people.
  3. Organizationally-based Communities: range from communities organized informally around family or network-based guilds and associations to more formal incorporated associations, political decision making structures, economic enterprises, or professional associations at a small, national or international scale.
  4. Intentional Communities: a mix of all three previous types, these are highly cohesive residential communities with a common social or spiritual purpose, ranging from monasteries and ashrams to modern ecovillages and housing cooperatives.

The usual categorizations of community relations have a number of problems:[28] (1) they tend to give the impression that a particular community can be defined as just this kind or another; (2) they tend to conflate modern and customary community relations; (3) they tend to take sociological categories such as ethnicity or race as given, forgetting that different ethnically defined persons live in different kinds of communities—grounded, interest-based, diasporic, etc.[29]

In response to these problems, Paul James and his colleagues have developed a taxonomy that maps community relations, and recognizes that actual communities can be characterized by different kinds of relations at the same time:[30]

  1. Grounded community relations. This involves enduring attachment to particular places and particular people. It is the dominant form taken by customary and tribal communities. In these kinds of communities, the land is fundamental to identity.
  2. Life-style community relations. This involves giving primacy to communities coming together around particular chosen ways of life, such as morally charged or interest-based relations or just living or working in the same location. Hence the following sub-forms:
    1. community-life as morally bounded, a form taken by many traditional faith-based communities.
    2. community-life as interest-based, including sporting, leisure-based and business communities which come together for regular moments of engagement.
    3. community-life as proximately-related, where neighbourhood or commonality of association forms a community of convenience, or a community of place (see below).
  3. Projected community relations. This is where a community is self-consciously treated as an entity to be projected and re-created. It can be projected as through thin advertising slogan, for example gated community, or can take the form of ongoing associations of people who seek political integration, communities of practice[31] based on professional projects, associative communities which seek to enhance and support individual creativity, autonomy and mutuality. A nation is one of the largest forms of projected or imagined community.

In these terms, communities can be nested and/or intersecting; one community can contain another—for example a location-based community may contain a number of ethnic communities.[32] Both lists above can used in a cross-cutting matrix in relation to each other.

Internet communities

In general, virtual communities value knowledge and information as currency or social resource.[33][34][35][36] What differentiates virtual communities from their physical counterparts is the extent and impact of "weak ties", which are the relationships acquaintances or strangers form to acquire information through online networks.[37] Relationships among members in a virtual community tend to focus on information exchange about specific topics.[38][39] A survey conducted by Pew Internet and The American Life Project in 2001 found those involved in entertainment, professional, and sports virtual-groups focused their activities on obtaining information.[40]

An epidemic of bullying and harassment has arisen from the exchange of information between strangers, especially among teenagers,[41] in virtual communities. Despite attempts to implement anti-bullying policies, Sheri Bauman, professor of counselling at the University of Arizona, claims the "most effective strategies to prevent bullying" may cost companies revenue.[42]

Virtual Internet-mediated communities can interact with offline real-life activity, potentially forming strong and tight-knit groups such as QAnon.[43]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ James, Paul; Nadarajah, Yaso; Haive, Karen; Stead, Victoria (2012). Sustainable Communities, Sustainable Development: Other Paths for Papua New Guinea. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. p. 14. [...] we define community very broadly as a group or network of persons who are connected (objectively) to each other by relatively durable social relations that extend beyond immediate genealogical ties and who mutually define that relationship (subjectively) as important to their social identity and social practice.
  2. ^ See also: James, Paul (2006). Globalism, Nationalism, Tribalism: Bringing Theory Back In – Volume 2 of Towards a Theory of Abstract Community. London: Sage Publications.
  3. ^ "community" Oxford Dictionaries. 2014.
  4. ^ Melih, Bulu (2011-10-31). City Competitiveness and Improving Urban Subsystems: Technologies and Applications: Technologies and Applications. IGI Global. ISBN 978-1-61350-175-7.
  5. ^ Canuto, Marcello A. and Jason Yaeger (editors) (2000) The Archaeology of Communities. Routledge, New York. Hegmon, Michelle (2002) Concepts of Community in Archaeological Research. In Seeking the Center: Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region, edited by Mark D. Varien and Richard H. Wilshusen, pp. 263–79. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.
  6. ^ Wilson, Alexander, ed. (1968). Advertising and the Community. Reprints of economic classes (reprint ed.). Manchester: Manchester University Press. p. 39. ISBN 9780719003363. Retrieved 6 June 2021. In Britain, by far the more fashionable concern is that for advertising's value to the community.
  7. ^ Everingham, Christine (2003). Social Justice and the Politics of Community. Welfare and society : studies in welfare policy, practice and theory (reprint ed.). Aldershot: Ashgate. p. 21. ISBN 9780754633983. Retrieved 6 June 2021. Community is a very troublesome word then, having a wide range of meanings and connotations but little in the way of specific content. It is particularly useful as a rhetorical device because of its democratic and populist connotations, being associated with 'the people', as distinct from 'the government'.
  8. ^ For example: Basu, Mohana (13 March 2020). "What is community transmission — how one can contract COVID-19 without travelling". ThePrint. Printline Media Pvt Ltd. Retrieved 6 June 2021. [...] when the source of transmission for a large number of people is not traceable it is called a community transmission. [...]Most types of influenza and bird flu outbreaks in the past were known to have spread through community transmission. The outbreak of H1N1 in 2009, commonly known as swine flu, was primarily through community transmission. [...] In the case of community transmission, contact tracing is inadequate in containing the disease. [...] This is particularly worrisome for health officials because that means the virus is in the community but no one knows where it has come from or track its origins. This also means the virus can be widespread in a community.
  9. ^ Feinberg, Joel (1988). The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law: Harmless wrongdoing. Volume 4 of The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-19-504253-5. Retrieved 6 June 2021. There is, as I have said, a law enforcement community but not a criminal community. Why should that be?
  10. ^ Tönnies, Ferdinand (1887). Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft, Leipzig: Fues's Verlag. An English translation of the 8th edition 1935 by Charles P. Loomis appeared in 1940 as Fundamental Concepts of Sociology (Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft), New York: American Book Co.; in 1955 as Community and Association (Gemeinschaft und gesellschaft[sic]), London: Routledge & Kegan Paul; and in 1957 as Community and Society, East Lansing: Michigan State U.P. Loomis includes as an Introduction, representing Tönnies' "most recent thinking", his 1931 article "Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft" in Handwörterbuch der Soziologie (Stuttgart, Enke V.).
  11. ^ McMillan, D.W., & Chavis, D.M. 1986. "Sense of community: A definition and theory," p. 16.
  12. ^ Perkins, D.D., Florin, P., Rich, R.C., Wandersman, A. & Chavis, D.M. (1990). Participation and the social and physical environment of residential blocks: Crime and community context. American Journal of Community Psychology, 18, 83–115. Chipuer, H.M., & Pretty, G.M.H. (1999). A review of the Sense of Community Index: Current uses, factor structure, reliability, and further development. Journal of Community Psychology, 27(6), 643–58. Long, D.A., & Perkins, D.D. (2003). Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Sense of Community Index and Development of a Brief SCI. Journal of Community Psychology, 31, 279–96.
  13. ^ "Sense of community: A definition and theory". from the original on 2022-09-07. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  14. ^ Newman, D. 2005. Chapter 5. "Building Identity: Socialization" 2012-01-06 at the Wayback Machine pp. 134–40.
  15. ^ Newman, D. 2005, p. 41.
  16. ^ Smith, M. 2001. Community 2012-10-29 at the Wayback Machine.
  17. ^ Kelly, Anthony, "With Head, Heart and Hand: Dimensions of Community Building" (Boolarong Press) ISBN 978-0-86439-076-9
  18. ^ , Oxford University Press
  19. ^ ABCD Institute, in cooperation with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. 2006. .[dead link]
  20. ^ ABCD Institute. 2006. Welcome to ABCD 2000-08-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  21. ^ Lutfiyya, Z.M (1988, March). Going for it": Life at the Gig Harbor Group Home. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Research and Training Center on Community Integration.
  22. ^ McKnight, J. (1989). Beyond Community Services. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University, Center of Urban Affairs and Policy Research.
  23. ^ M. Scott Peck, (1987). The Different Drum: Community-Making and Peace, pp. 83–85.
  24. ^ Peck (1987), pp. 86–106.
  25. ^ "Sense of Community: A Definition and Theory — Dr. David McMillan". from the original on 2022-12-29. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  26. ^ Jacoby Brown, Michael, (2006), Building Powerful Community Organizations: A Personal Guide To Creating Groups That Can Solve Problems and Change the World (Long Haul Press)
  27. ^ Walls, David (1994) "Power to the People: Thirty-five Years of Community Organizing" 2010-11-15 at the Wayback Machine. From The Workbook, Summer 1994, pp. 52–55. Retrieved on: June 22, 2008.
  28. ^ Gerhard Delanty, Community, Routledge, London, 2003.
  29. ^ James, Paul (2006). Globalism, Nationalism, Tribalism: Bringing Theory Back In – Volume 2 of Towards a Theory of Abstract Community. London: Sage Publications.
  30. ^ James, Paul; Nadarajah, Yaso; Haive, Karen; Stead, Victoria (2012). Sustainable Communities, Sustainable Development: Other Paths for Papua New Guinea (pdf download). Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
  31. ^ Etienne Wenger, Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning and Identity, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998.
  32. ^ Tropman John E., Erlich, John L. and Rothman, Jack (2006), "Tactics and Techniques of Community Intervention" (Wadsworth Publishing)
  33. ^ Ridings, Catherine M., Gefen, David (2017). From the couch to the keyboard: Psychotherapy in cyberspace. In S. Kiesler (Ed.), Culture of the Internet (pp. 71–102). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, cited in Binik, Y. M., Cantor, J., Ochs, E., & Meana, M. (1997).
  34. ^ Ridings, Catherine M., Gefen, David (2017). Asynchronous learning networks as a virtual classroom. Communications of the ACM, 40 (9), 44–49, cited in Hiltz, S. R., & Wellman, B. (1997).
  35. ^ Ridings, Catherine M., Gefen, David (2017). A slice of life in my virtual community. In L. M. Harasim (Ed.), Global networks: Computers and international communication (pp. 57–80). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, cited in Rheingold, H. (1993a).
  36. ^ Ridings, Catherine M., Gefen, David (2017). Atheism, sex and databases: The Net as a social technology. In S. Kiesler (Ed.), Culture of the Internet (pp. 35–51). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, cited in Sproull, L., & Faraj, S. (1997).
  37. ^ Ridings, Catherine M., Gefen, David (2017). The kindness of strangers: The usefulness of electronic weak ties for technical advice. Organization Science, 7 (2), 119–135, cited in Constant, D., Sproull, L., & Kiesler, S. (1996).
  38. ^ Baym, N. K. (2000). Tune in, log on: Soaps, fandom and online community. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, Inc.
  39. ^ Wellman, B., & Gulia, M. (1999a). The network basis of social support: A network is more than the sum of its ties. In B. Wellman (Ed.), Networks in the global village: Life in contemporary communities (pp. 83–118). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
  40. ^ Horrigan, J. B., Rainie, L., & Fox, S. (2001). Online communities: Networks that nurture long-distance relationships and local ties. Retrieved October 17, 2003 from http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/Report1.pdf 2009-02-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  41. ^ Smith, Peter K.; Mahdavi, Jess; Carvalho, Manuel; Fisher, Sonja; Russell, Shanette; Tippett, Neil (2008). "Cyberbullying: its nature and impact in secondary school pupils". The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 49 (4): 376–385. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7610.2007.01846.x. PMID 18363945.
  42. ^ Wellemeyer, James (July 17, 2019). "Instagram, Facebook and Twitter struggle to contain the epidemic in online bullying". MarketWatch. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  43. ^ Dickson, E.J. (22 January 2021). "The QAnon Community Is in Crisis — But On Telegram, It's Also Growing". Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone, LLC. ISSN 0035-791X. Retrieved 18 February 2021. On the encrypted messaging app Telegram, however, which is currently serving as a bastion of far-right extremism, the QAnon community is not just thriving, but growing, according to data from the Center for Hate and Extremism.

References

  • Barzilai, Gad. 2003. Communities and Law: Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Beck, U. 1992. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. London: Sage: 2000. What is globalization? Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Chavis, D.M., Hogge, J.H., McMillan, D.W., & Wandersman, A. 1986. "Sense of community through Brunswick's lens: A first look." Journal of Community Psychology, 14(1), 24–40.
  • Chipuer, H.M., & Pretty, G.M.H. (1999). A review of the Sense of Community Index: Current uses, factor structure, reliability, and further development. Journal of Community Psychology, 27(6), 643–58.
  • Christensen, K., et al. (2003). Encyclopedia of Community. 4 volumes. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  • Cohen, A. P. 1985. The Symbolic Construction of Community. Routledge: New York.
  • Durkheim, Émile. 1950 [1895] The Rules of Sociological Method. Translated by S.A. Solovay and J.H. Mueller. New York: The Free Press.
  • Cox, F., J. Erlich, J. Rothman, and J. Tropman. 1970. Strategies of Community Organization: A Book of Readings. Itasca, IL: F.E. Peacock Publishers.
  • Effland, R. 1998. The Cultural Evolution of Civilizations Mesa Community College.
  • Giddens, A. 1999. "Risk and Responsibility" Modern Law Review 62(1): 1–10.
  • James, Paul (1996). Nation Formation: Towards a Theory of Abstract Community. London: Sage Publications.
  • Lenski, G. 1974. Human Societies: An Introduction to Macrosociology. New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc.
  • Long, D.A., & Perkins, D.D. (2003). Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Sense of Community Index and Development of a Brief SCI. Journal of Community Psychology, 31, 279–96.
  • Lyall, Scott, ed. (2016). Community in Modern Scottish Literature. Brill | Rodopi: Leiden | Boston.
  • Nancy, Jean-Luc. La Communauté désœuvrée – philosophical questioning of the concept of community and the possibility of encountering a non-subjective concept of it
  • Muegge, Steven (2013). "Platforms, communities and business ecosystems: Lessons learned about entrepreneurship in an interconnected world". Technology Innovation Management Review. 3 (February): 5–15. doi:10.22215/timreview/655.
  • Newman, D. 2005. Sociology: Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life, Chapter 5. "Building Identity: Socialization" 2012-01-06 at the Wayback Machine Pine Forge Press. Retrieved: 2006-08-05.
  • Putnam, R.D. 2000. Bowling Alone: The collapse and revival of American community. New York: Simon & Schuster
  • Sarason, S.B. 1974. The psychological sense of community: Prospects for a community psychology. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. 1986. "Commentary: The emergence of a conceptual center." Journal of Community Psychology, 14, 405–07.
  • Smith, M.K. 2001. Community. Encyclopedia of informal education. Last updated: January 28, 2005. Retrieved: 2006-07-15.

community, series, series, other, uses, disambiguation, community, social, unit, group, living, things, with, commonality, such, place, norms, religion, values, customs, identity, communities, share, sense, place, situated, given, geographical, area, country, . For the TV series see Community TV series For other uses see Community disambiguation A community is a social unit a group of living things with commonality such as place norms religion values customs or identity Communities may share a sense of place situated in a given geographical area e g a country village town or neighbourhood or in virtual space through communication platforms Durable good relations that extend beyond immediate genealogical ties also define a sense of community important to their identity practice and roles in social institutions such as family home work government society or humanity at large 1 Although communities are usually small relative to personal social ties community may also refer to large group affiliations such as national communities international communities and virtual communities 2 A community of interest gathers at Stonehenge England for the summer solstice The English language word community derives from the Old French comunete Modern French communaute which comes from the Latin communitas community public spirit from Latin communis common 3 Human communities may have intent belief resources preferences needs and risks in common affecting the identity of the participants and their degree of cohesiveness 4 Contents 1 Perspectives of various disciplines 1 1 Archaeology 1 2 Sociology 1 3 Ecology 1 4 Semantics 2 Key concepts 2 1 Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft 2 2 Sense of community 2 2 1 Socialization 3 Community development 3 1 Community building and organizing 4 Types of community 5 Internet communities 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesPerspectives of various disciplines EditArchaeology Edit Archaeological studies of social communities use the term community in two ways paralleling usage in other areas The first is an informal definition of community as a place where people used to live In this sense it is synonymous with the concept of an ancient settlement whether a hamlet village town or city The second meaning resembles the usage of the term in other social sciences a community is a group of people living near one another who interact socially Social interaction on a small scale can be difficult to identify with archaeological data Most reconstructions of social communities by archaeologists rely on the principle that social interaction in the past was conditioned by physical distance Therefore a small village settlement likely constituted a social community and spatial subdivisions of cities and other large settlements may have formed communities Archaeologists typically use similarities in material culture from house types to styles of pottery to reconstruct communities in the past This classification method relies on the assumption that people or households will share more similarities in the types and styles of their material goods with other members of a social community than they will with outsiders 5 Sociology Edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it January 2022 Ecology Edit Main article Community ecology In ecology a community is an assemblage of populations potentially of different species interacting with one another Community ecology is the branch of ecology that studies interactions between and among species It considers how such interactions along with interactions between species and the abiotic environment affect social structure and species richness diversity and patterns of abundance Species interact in three ways competition predation and mutualism Competition typically results in a double negative that is both species lose in the interaction Predation involves a win lose situation with one species winning Mutualism sees both species co operating in some way with both winning The two main types of ecological communities are major communities which are self sustaining and self regulating such as a forest or a lake and minor communities which rely on other communities like fungi decomposing a log and are the building blocks of major communities A simplified example of a community A community includes many populations and how they interact with each other This example shows interaction between the zebra and the bush and between the lion and the zebra as well as between the bird and the organisms by the water like the worms Semantics Edit The concept of community often has a positive semantic connotation exploited rhetorically by populist politicians and by advertisers 6 to promote feelings and associations of mutual well being happiness and togetherness 7 veering towards an almost achievable utopian community In contrast the epidemiological term community transmission can have negative implications 8 and instead of a criminal community 9 one often speaks of a criminal underworld or of the criminal fraternity Key concepts EditGemeinschaft and Gesellschaft Edit Main article Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft In Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft 1887 German sociologist Ferdinand Tonnies described two types of human association Gemeinschaft usually translated as community and Gesellschaft society or association Tonnies proposed the Gemeinschaft Gesellschaft dichotomy as a way to think about social ties No group is exclusively one or the other Gemeinschaft stress personal social interactions and the roles values and beliefs based on such interactions Gesellschaft stress indirect interactions impersonal roles formal values and beliefs based on such interactions 10 Sense of community Edit Main article Sense of community In a seminal 1986 study McMillan and Chavis 11 identify four elements of sense of community membership feeling of belonging or of sharing a sense of personal relatedness influence mattering making a difference to a group and of the group mattering to its members reinforcement integration and fulfillment of needs shared emotional connection To what extent do participants in joint activities experience a sense of community A sense of community index SCI was developed by Chavis and colleagues and revised and adapted by others Although originally designed to assess sense of community in neighborhoods the index has been adapted for use in schools the workplace and a variety of types of communities 12 Studies conducted by the APPA who indicate that young adults who feel a sense of belonging in a community particularly small communities develop fewer psychiatric and depressive disorders than those who do not have the feeling of love and belonging 13 Socialization Edit Main article Socialization Lewes Bonfire Night procession commemorating 17 Protestant martyrs burnt at the stake from 1555 to 1557 The process of learning to adopt the behavior patterns of the community is called socialization The most fertile time of socialization is usually the early stages of life during which individuals develop the skills and knowledge and learn the roles necessary to function within their culture and social environment 14 For some psychologists especially those in the psychodynamic tradition the most important period of socialization is between the ages of one and ten But socialization also includes adults moving into a significantly different environment where they must learn a new set of behaviors 15 Socialization is influenced primarily by the family through which children first learn community norms Other important influences include schools peer groups people mass media the workplace and government The degree to which the norms of a particular society or community are adopted determines one s willingness to engage with others The norms of tolerance reciprocity and trust are important habits of the heart as de Tocqueville put it in an individual s involvement in community 16 Community development EditMain article Community development Community development is often linked with community work or community planning and may involve stakeholders foundations governments or contracted entities including non government organisations NGOs universities or government agencies to progress the social well being of local regional and sometimes national communities More grassroots efforts called community building or community organizing seek to empower individuals and groups of people by providing them with the skills they need to effect change in their own communities 17 These skills often assist in building political power through the formation of large social groups working for a common agenda Community development practitioners must understand both how to work with individuals and how to affect communities positions within the context of larger social institutions Public administrators in contrast need to understand community development in the context of rural and urban development housing and economic development and community organizational and business development Formal accredited programs conducted by universities as part of degree granting institutions are often used to build a knowledge base to drive curricula in public administration sociology and community studies The General Social Survey from the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago and the Saguaro Seminar at the Harvard Kennedy School are examples of national community development in the United States The Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University in New York State offers core courses in community and economic development and in areas ranging from non profit development to US budgeting federal to local community funds In the United Kingdom the University of Oxford has led in providing extensive research in the field through its Community Development Journal 18 used worldwide by sociologists and community development practitioners At the intersection between community development and community building are a number of programs and organizations with community development tools One example of this is the program of the Asset Based Community Development Institute of Northwestern University The institute makes available downloadable tools 19 to assess community assets and make connections between non profit groups and other organizations that can help in community building The Institute focuses on helping communities develop by mobilizing neighborhood assets building from the inside out rather than the outside in 20 In the disability field community building was prevalent in the 1980s and 1990s with roots in John McKnight s approaches 21 22 Community building and organizing Edit The anti war affinity group Collateral Damage protesting the Iraq War In The Different Drum Community Making and Peace 1987 Scott Peck argues that the almost accidental sense of community that exists at times of crisis can be consciously built Peck believes that conscious community building is a process of deliberate design based on the knowledge and application of certain rules 23 He states that this process goes through four stages 24 Pseudocommunity When people first come together they try to be nice and present what they feel are their most personable and friendly characteristics Chaos People move beyond the inauthenticity of pseudo community and feel safe enough to present their shadow selves Emptiness Moves beyond the attempts to fix heal and convert of the chaos stage when all people become capable of acknowledging their own woundedness and brokenness common to human beings True community Deep respect and true listening for the needs of the other people in this community In 1991 Peck remarked that building a sense of community is easy but maintaining this sense of community is difficult in the modern world 25 An interview with M Scott Peck by Alan Atkisson In Context 29 p 26 The three basic types of community organizing are grassroots organizing coalition building and institution based community organizing also called broad based community organizing an example of which is faith based community organizing or Congregation based Community Organizing 26 Community building can use a wide variety of practices ranging from simple events e g potlucks small book clubs to larger scale efforts e g mass festivals construction projects that involve local participants rather than outside contractors Community building that is geared toward citizen action is usually termed community organizing 27 In these cases organized community groups seek accountability from elected officials and increased direct representation within decision making bodies Where good faith negotiations fail these constituency led organizations seek to pressure the decision makers through a variety of means including picketing boycotting sit ins petitioning and electoral politics Community organizing can focus on more than just resolving specific issues Organizing often means building a widely accessible power structure often with the end goal of distributing power equally throughout the community Community organizers generally seek to build groups that are open and democratic in governance Such groups facilitate and encourage consensus decision making with a focus on the general health of the community rather than a specific interest group If communities are developed based on something they share in common whether location or values then one challenge for developing communities is how to incorporate individuality and differences Rebekah Nathan suggests according to whom in her book My Freshman Year we are drawn to developing communities totally based on sameness despite stated commitments to diversity such as those found on university websites Types of community Edit Participants in Diana Leafe Christian s Heart of a Healthy Community seminar circle during an afternoon session at O U R Ecovillage A number of ways to categorize types of community have been proposed One such breakdown is as follows Location based Communities range from the local neighbourhood suburb village town or city region nation or even the planet as a whole These are also called communities of place Identity based Communities range from the local clique sub culture ethnic group religious multicultural or pluralistic civilisation or the global community cultures of today They may be included as communities of need or identity such as disabled persons or frail aged people Organizationally based Communities range from communities organized informally around family or network based guilds and associations to more formal incorporated associations political decision making structures economic enterprises or professional associations at a small national or international scale Intentional Communities a mix of all three previous types these are highly cohesive residential communities with a common social or spiritual purpose ranging from monasteries and ashrams to modern ecovillages and housing cooperatives The usual categorizations of community relations have a number of problems 28 1 they tend to give the impression that a particular community can be defined as just this kind or another 2 they tend to conflate modern and customary community relations 3 they tend to take sociological categories such as ethnicity or race as given forgetting that different ethnically defined persons live in different kinds of communities grounded interest based diasporic etc 29 In response to these problems Paul James and his colleagues have developed a taxonomy that maps community relations and recognizes that actual communities can be characterized by different kinds of relations at the same time 30 Grounded community relations This involves enduring attachment to particular places and particular people It is the dominant form taken by customary and tribal communities In these kinds of communities the land is fundamental to identity Life style community relations This involves giving primacy to communities coming together around particular chosen ways of life such as morally charged or interest based relations or just living or working in the same location Hence the following sub forms community life as morally bounded a form taken by many traditional faith based communities community life as interest based including sporting leisure based and business communities which come together for regular moments of engagement community life as proximately related where neighbourhood or commonality of association forms a community of convenience or a community of place see below Projected community relations This is where a community is self consciously treated as an entity to be projected and re created It can be projected as through thin advertising slogan for example gated community or can take the form of ongoing associations of people who seek political integration communities of practice 31 based on professional projects associative communities which seek to enhance and support individual creativity autonomy and mutuality A nation is one of the largest forms of projected or imagined community In these terms communities can be nested and or intersecting one community can contain another for example a location based community may contain a number of ethnic communities 32 Both lists above can used in a cross cutting matrix in relation to each other Internet communities EditMain article Virtual community In general virtual communities value knowledge and information as currency or social resource 33 34 35 36 What differentiates virtual communities from their physical counterparts is the extent and impact of weak ties which are the relationships acquaintances or strangers form to acquire information through online networks 37 Relationships among members in a virtual community tend to focus on information exchange about specific topics 38 39 A survey conducted by Pew Internet and The American Life Project in 2001 found those involved in entertainment professional and sports virtual groups focused their activities on obtaining information 40 An epidemic of bullying and harassment has arisen from the exchange of information between strangers especially among teenagers 41 in virtual communities Despite attempts to implement anti bullying policies Sheri Bauman professor of counselling at the University of Arizona claims the most effective strategies to prevent bullying may cost companies revenue 42 Virtual Internet mediated communities can interact with offline real life activity potentially forming strong and tight knit groups such as QAnon 43 See also EditCircles of Sustainability Communitarianism Community theatre Engaged theory Outline of community Wikipedia communityNotes Edit James Paul Nadarajah Yaso Haive Karen Stead Victoria 2012 Sustainable Communities Sustainable Development Other Paths for Papua New Guinea Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 14 we define community very broadly as a group or network of persons who are connected objectively to each other by relatively durable social relations that extend beyond immediate genealogical ties and who mutually define that relationship subjectively as important to their social identity and social practice See also James Paul 2006 Globalism Nationalism Tribalism Bringing Theory Back In Volume 2 of Towards a Theory of Abstract Community London Sage Publications community Oxford Dictionaries 2014 Oxford Dictionaries Melih Bulu 2011 10 31 City Competitiveness and Improving Urban Subsystems Technologies and Applications Technologies and Applications IGI Global ISBN 978 1 61350 175 7 Canuto Marcello A and Jason Yaeger editors 2000 The Archaeology of Communities Routledge New York Hegmon Michelle 2002 Concepts of Community in Archaeological Research In Seeking the Center Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region edited by Mark D Varien and Richard H Wilshusen pp 263 79 University of Utah Press Salt Lake City Wilson Alexander ed 1968 Advertising and the Community Reprints of economic classes reprint ed Manchester Manchester University Press p 39 ISBN 9780719003363 Retrieved 6 June 2021 In Britain by far the more fashionable concern is that for advertising s value to the community Everingham Christine 2003 Social Justice and the Politics of Community Welfare and society studies in welfare policy practice and theory reprint ed Aldershot Ashgate p 21 ISBN 9780754633983 Retrieved 6 June 2021 Community is a very troublesome word then having a wide range of meanings and connotations but little in the way of specific content It is particularly useful as a rhetorical device because of its democratic and populist connotations being associated with the people as distinct from the government For example Basu Mohana 13 March 2020 What is community transmission how one can contract COVID 19 without travelling ThePrint Printline Media Pvt Ltd Retrieved 6 June 2021 when the source of transmission for a large number of people is not traceable it is called a community transmission Most types of influenza and bird flu outbreaks in the past were known to have spread through community transmission The outbreak of H1N1 in 2009 commonly known as swine flu was primarily through community transmission In the case of community transmission contact tracing is inadequate in containing the disease This is particularly worrisome for health officials because that means the virus is in the community but no one knows where it has come from or track its origins This also means the virus can be widespread in a community Feinberg Joel 1988 The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law Harmless wrongdoing Volume 4 of The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law Oxford Oxford University Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 19 504253 5 Retrieved 6 June 2021 There is as I have said a law enforcement community but not a criminal community Why should that be Tonnies Ferdinand 1887 Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Leipzig Fues s Verlag An English translation of the 8th edition 1935 by Charles P Loomis appeared in 1940 as Fundamental Concepts of Sociology Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft New York American Book Co in 1955 as Community and Association Gemeinschaft und gesellschaft sic London Routledge amp Kegan Paul and in 1957 as Community and Society East Lansing Michigan State U P Loomis includes as an Introduction representing Tonnies most recent thinking his 1931 article Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft in Handworterbuch der Soziologie Stuttgart Enke V McMillan D W amp Chavis D M 1986 Sense of community A definition and theory p 16 Perkins D D Florin P Rich R C Wandersman A amp Chavis D M 1990 Participation and the social and physical environment of residential blocks Crime and community context American Journal of Community Psychology 18 83 115 Chipuer H M amp Pretty G M H 1999 A review of the Sense of Community Index Current uses factor structure reliability and further development Journal of Community Psychology 27 6 643 58 Long D A amp Perkins D D 2003 Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Sense of Community Index and Development of a Brief SCI Journal of Community Psychology 31 279 96 Sense of community A definition and theory Archived from the original on 2022 09 07 Retrieved 2022 12 29 Newman D 2005 Chapter 5 Building Identity Socialization Archived 2012 01 06 at the Wayback Machine pp 134 40 Newman D 2005 p 41 Smith M 2001 Community Archived 2012 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Kelly Anthony With Head Heart and Hand Dimensions of Community Building Boolarong Press ISBN 978 0 86439 076 9 Community Development Journal Oxford University Press ABCD Institute in cooperation with the W K Kellogg Foundation 2006 Discovering Community Power A Guide to Mobilizing Local Assets and Your Organization s Capacity dead link ABCD Institute 2006 Welcome to ABCD Archived 2000 08 19 at the Wayback Machine Lutfiyya Z M 1988 March Going for it Life at the Gig Harbor Group Home Syracuse NY Syracuse University Center on Human Policy Research and Training Center on Community Integration McKnight J 1989 Beyond Community Services Evanston IL Northwestern University Center of Urban Affairs and Policy Research M Scott Peck 1987 The Different Drum Community Making and Peace pp 83 85 Peck 1987 pp 86 106 Sense of Community A Definition and Theory Dr David McMillan Archived from the original on 2022 12 29 Retrieved 2022 12 29 Jacoby Brown Michael 2006 Building Powerful Community Organizations A Personal Guide To Creating Groups That Can Solve Problems and Change the World Long Haul Press Walls David 1994 Power to the People Thirty five Years of Community Organizing Archived 2010 11 15 at the Wayback Machine From The Workbook Summer 1994 pp 52 55 Retrieved on June 22 2008 Gerhard Delanty Community Routledge London 2003 James Paul 2006 Globalism Nationalism Tribalism Bringing Theory Back In Volume 2 of Towards a Theory of Abstract Community London Sage Publications James Paul Nadarajah Yaso Haive Karen Stead Victoria 2012 Sustainable Communities Sustainable Development Other Paths for Papua New Guinea pdf download Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Etienne Wenger Communities of Practice Learning Meaning and Identity Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1998 Tropman John E Erlich John L and Rothman Jack 2006 Tactics and Techniques of Community Intervention Wadsworth Publishing Ridings Catherine M Gefen David 2017 From the couch to the keyboard Psychotherapy in cyberspace In S Kiesler Ed Culture of the Internet pp 71 102 Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates cited in Binik Y M Cantor J Ochs E amp Meana M 1997 Ridings Catherine M Gefen David 2017 Asynchronous learning networks as a virtual classroom Communications of the ACM 40 9 44 49 cited in Hiltz S R amp Wellman B 1997 Ridings Catherine M Gefen David 2017 A slice of life in my virtual community In L M Harasim Ed Global networks Computers and international communication pp 57 80 Cambridge MA The MIT Press cited in Rheingold H 1993a Ridings Catherine M Gefen David 2017 Atheism sex and databases The Net as a social technology In S Kiesler Ed Culture of the Internet pp 35 51 Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates cited in Sproull L amp Faraj S 1997 Ridings Catherine M Gefen David 2017 The kindness of strangers The usefulness of electronic weak ties for technical advice Organization Science 7 2 119 135 cited in Constant D Sproull L amp Kiesler S 1996 Baym N K 2000 Tune in log on Soaps fandom and online community Thousand Oaks Sage Publications Inc Wellman B amp Gulia M 1999a The network basis of social support A network is more than the sum of its ties In B Wellman Ed Networks in the global village Life in contemporary communities pp 83 118 Boulder CO Westview Press Horrigan J B Rainie L amp Fox S 2001 Online communities Networks that nurture long distance relationships and local ties Retrieved October 17 2003 from http www pewinternet org pdfs Report1 pdf Archived 2009 02 19 at the Wayback Machine Smith Peter K Mahdavi Jess Carvalho Manuel Fisher Sonja Russell Shanette Tippett Neil 2008 Cyberbullying its nature and impact in secondary school pupils The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 49 4 376 385 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7610 2007 01846 x PMID 18363945 Wellemeyer James July 17 2019 Instagram Facebook and Twitter struggle to contain the epidemic in online bullying MarketWatch Retrieved September 30 2019 Dickson E J 22 January 2021 The QAnon Community Is in Crisis But On Telegram It s Also Growing Rolling Stone Rolling Stone LLC ISSN 0035 791X Retrieved 18 February 2021 On the encrypted messaging app Telegram however which is currently serving as a bastion of far right extremism the QAnon community is not just thriving but growing according to data from the Center for Hate and Extremism References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Community Look up community in Wiktionary the free dictionary Barzilai Gad 2003 Communities and Law Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press Beck U 1992 Risk Society Towards a New Modernity London Sage 2000 What is globalization Cambridge Polity Press Chavis D M Hogge J H McMillan D W amp Wandersman A 1986 Sense of community through Brunswick s lens A first look Journal of Community Psychology 14 1 24 40 Chipuer H M amp Pretty G M H 1999 A review of the Sense of Community Index Current uses factor structure reliability and further development Journal of Community Psychology 27 6 643 58 Christensen K et al 2003 Encyclopedia of Community 4 volumes Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cohen A P 1985 The Symbolic Construction of Community Routledge New York Durkheim Emile 1950 1895 The Rules of Sociological Method Translated by S A Solovay and J H Mueller New York The Free Press Cox F J Erlich J Rothman and J Tropman 1970 Strategies of Community Organization A Book of Readings Itasca IL F E Peacock Publishers Effland R 1998 The Cultural Evolution of Civilizations Mesa Community College Giddens A 1999 Risk and Responsibility Modern Law Review 62 1 1 10 James Paul 1996 Nation Formation Towards a Theory of Abstract Community London Sage Publications Lenski G 1974 Human Societies An Introduction to Macrosociology New York McGraw Hill Inc Long D A amp Perkins D D 2003 Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Sense of Community Index and Development of a Brief SCI Journal of Community Psychology 31 279 96 Lyall Scott ed 2016 Community in Modern Scottish Literature Brill Rodopi Leiden Boston Nancy Jean Luc La Communaute desœuvree philosophical questioning of the concept of community and the possibility of encountering a non subjective concept of it Muegge Steven 2013 Platforms communities and business ecosystems Lessons learned about entrepreneurship in an interconnected world Technology Innovation Management Review 3 February 5 15 doi 10 22215 timreview 655 Newman D 2005 Sociology Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life Chapter 5 Building Identity Socialization Archived 2012 01 06 at the Wayback Machine Pine Forge Press Retrieved 2006 08 05 Putnam R D 2000 Bowling Alone The collapse and revival of American community New York Simon amp Schuster Sarason S B 1974 The psychological sense of community Prospects for a community psychology San Francisco Jossey Bass 1986 Commentary The emergence of a conceptual center Journal of Community Psychology 14 405 07 Smith M K 2001 Community Encyclopedia of informal education Last updated January 28 2005 Retrieved 2006 07 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Community amp oldid 1140377222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.