Aboriginal Involvement in Community Development: The Case of Winnipeg's Spence NeighbourhoodCanadian Centre Policy Alternatives, 2004 - 40 σελίδες Consistent with the methods of participatory research, we worked closely with the Spence Neighbourhood Association (SNA), successfully seeking their permission to conduct the research and their advice about the project, and circulating a next-to-final draft of the paper to SNA staff and Board members for their comments, most of which were incorporated in the final draft. [...] A community development approach that builds ways to celebrate the urban expression of Aboriginal cultures will promote the involvement of Aboriginal people, and the increased pride and self-esteem that comes with involvement in their cultures will build the foundation upon which Aboriginal people will be better able to engage with the dominant culture on the basis of mutual respect. [...] We use bourhood, and to identify both what Aboriginal CD to mean people themselves identifying the people themselves believe to be useful forms of problems that they want to solve, and the ways CD, and what they believe they and other that they want to solve them, and we do not Aboriginal people in the neighbourhood could assume that this implies the adoption of the contribute to the community's d [...] We Aboriginal people in Spence, the lead author offered the view that while there are things that interviewed six Board members and staff of the the SNA might do differently to encourage the Spence Neighbourhood Association, including involvement of Aboriginal people, the problem the Executive Director, and interviewed both Hay has less to do with the specific actions of the SNA and Gorzen in thei [...] The Royal 20 Aboriginal Involvement in Community Development: Spence Neighbourhood Commission on Aboriginal Peoples Round Table Association of Friendship Centres, as follows: on Aboriginal Urban Issues, held in June, 1992, listed the following as the first of the themes that "Our culture is at the heart of our people, emerged at the Round Table: "the survival of and without awareness of Aboriginal. |
Περιεχόμενα
Executive Summary | 1 |
Introduction | 3 |
Spence Neighbourhood | 4 |
Method | 6 |
Findings 10 Involvement With the Spence Neighbourhood Association | 10 |
An Aboriginal View | 15 |
Social Capital and Aboriginal Cultures | 18 |
Building Social Capital by Promoting Aboriginal Cultures | 20 |
Promoting Aboriginal Involvement in Spence Neighbourhood | 22 |
Skills and Abilities | 25 |
Jobs and the Community Development Principle of Hiring Locally | 27 |
Housing and Community Development | 30 |
Crime and Safety and Community Development | 31 |
Conclusion | 33 |
References | 37 |
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
Aboriginal community Aboriginal involvement Aboriginal Neighbourhood Association Aboriginal peo Aboriginal Residents Group become involved believe bourhood Bousquet and Bruyere Broadway Aboriginal Residents Canada Canada West Foundation Canadian Community Development Journal community development strategy community organizations crime and safety Deane dominant culture elders feel focus group hired hood important Indian inner city inner-city institutions inter involvement of Aboriginal kids living in Spence Manitoba meeting ment Métis Morrissette munity non-Aboriginal North End Housing numbers of Aboriginal Ojibwa Participation Participatory Action Research participatory research personal invitation Peter MacKinnon practise programs promoting Aboriginal promotion of Aboriginal Queen’s University racism sense of social skills and abilities SNA Board SNA staff social capital social exclusion Spence Aboriginal Neighbourhood Spence Aboriginal Residents Spence neigh Spence neighbour Spence Neighbourhood Association street study of Aboriginal stuff there's things tions told traditional West Broadway Aboriginal Winnipeg Winnipeg's North Winnipeg’s north end