Description
This book takes up the challenge of the failure of most initiatives in community-based service delivery to address the significant philosophical shift that is necessary to create, implement, and evaluate appropriately these sorts of projects. Challenging the tendency to focus entirely on practicalities, the authors emphasize the centrality of philosophy to any successful community-based undertaking. While fully acknowledging the importance of local knowledge and the guidance of projects by local people, this volume shows that these principles are often at odds with the ‘Cartesian’ mindset that underpins much project planning, with its emphasis on objectivity in science and knowledge. Since all knowledge is mediated by human activity and embedded in language and other modes of expression, this dualist approach must be reconsidered. A thorough rethinking of traditional service delivery, which takes into account issues of data, methodology, and bias together with questions of generalizability, community, power, and communication, this book will appeal to scholars of sociology, social policy, and social work with interests in community-based service delivery.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Theory and Community-based Work
John W. Murphy and Jung Min Choi
1. Basics of Community-based Work
Karen A. Callaghan
2. Unpacking Culture: A Community-based Approach
Felicia O. Casanova
3. Developing and Evaluating Community-based Health Interventions: The Role of Data
Khary K. Rigg and Kristin A. Kosyluk
4. Methodological Reflections of Research in a Community Service Organization
J. Eric Coleman and Steven L. Arxer
5. Community-based Work in the Absence of Identity
Jung Min Choi
6. A Community Does Not Exist
Karie Jo Peralta and Shahna Arps
7. There Is No Generalizability in Community-based Work
Tashina J. Vavuris
8. Philosophy and the Embrace of Bias in Community-based Medical Education
Berkeley Franz and Dawn M. Graham
9. Community-based Work and the Natural Language Problem
John W. Murphy and Liza Hayes Mathias
10. Power and Positionality in Community-Engaged Work and Community-Based Participatory Research
Airín D. Martínez, Brenda D. Evans, and Ana L. Jaramillo
Conclusion
Jung Min Choi and John W. Murphy
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