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Organizing for Community Controlled Development
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Organizing for Community Controlled Development
Renewing Civil Society



March 2003 | 360 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Organizing for Community Controlled Development proposes a detailed model for the renewal and revitalization of local communities providing residents and community development organizations with a comprehensive guide on how to strengthen local assets and make and control the necessary social, political and economic plans for change.
 
A Personal Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
Chapter 1 Introduction
 
Chapter 2 The Potency of Community Power
 
Chapter 3 Community Development Corporations and the Resurgence of Organizing
 
Chapter 4 The Small Community
 
Chapter 5 Community Organizing: Principal Tool for Change and Reform
 
Chapter 6 Participation: Lifeblood of Renewal
 
Chapter 7 Aliquippa: A Small Community on the Front Line
 
Chapter 8 Forging an Organizational Plan
 
Chapter 9 Unity in Creating a Comprehensive Community Plan
 
Chapter 10 Maximizing Social Strength
 
Chapter 11 Tapping Essential Resources
 
Chapter 12 Capital Formation: Building Community Financial Assets
 
Chapter 13 Neighborhood Preservation Through Affordable Housing
 
Chapter 14 Business District Renewal: Transforming Your Shopping Area
 
Chapter 15 Workforce Development: Strengthening the Economic Base of the Small Community
 
Chapter 16 Organizing for Community Controlled Development and the Promise of Coalition Politics
 
Index
 
About the Authors

"This book is both important and timely. Written by practitioners who are also academics, the book combines solid research, observation and practical experience that speak forcefully to the need for both local place-based development and greater citizen involvement. The examples they give of successful local efforts to renew neighborhoods demonstrate that change is possible and that resources are available for such purposes. Patricia W. Murphy and James V. Cunningham have provided a roadmap for rebuilding many of our communities and for strengthening the foundations of our democracy."

Pablo Eisenberg
Georgetown Public Policy Institute

"Cunningham and Murphy have made a unique contribution to our understanding of economic development at the community level. For practitioners, students, and academicians, no other book connects the practical aspects of building an economic foundation and weaving the social fabric with such an inspiring sense of purpose. This is a work that is not only rigorous and useful, but is fun to read. Anyone who has ever tried to revive a blighted neighborhood will want to read this book."

David M. Feehan
International Downtown Association

"The authors lay out a compelling vision and a comprehensive organizing strategy for revitalizing local communities. Packed with rich case examples, this book presents a model for neighborhood planning and includes cutting-edge ideas for drawing on a community's strengths, assets and resources. This community-driven approach offers new hope for addressing problems stemming from America's growing racial divide, public indifference, the broken social contract, and economic disinvestment in low and moderate income communities. This is a must-read for community organizers, urban planners, public officials, economic developers, and neighborhood activists."

Lee Staples
Boston University School of Social Work

"In this book, two veteran organizers propose putting community organizing back at the heart of neighborhood development. Murphy and Cunningham see Americans living in an almost endless number and variety of such places (they estimate there are 60,000 small communities) and lay out the components that any one of these might use to fashion its own tailor-made community organizing effort. It’s a bold, comprehensive scheme worth careful reading by all in the field."

Ed Marciniak
Director, The Institute of Urban Life

“It is a
worthy book, with probably the best collection of resources anywhere for those
trying to combine organizing and development.”

Shelterforce Magazine

The reading material will add value for students in further understanding various aspects of community organizing, development, and research.

Dr Lason Hines
School Of Architecture, Prairie View A & M University
April 22, 2013