Using empowerment theory in collaborative partnerships for community health and development
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Community Psychology
- Vol. 23 (5) , 677-697
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02506987
Abstract
Models of community empowerment help us understand the process of gaining influence over conditions that matter to people who share neighborhoods, workplaces, experiences, or concerns. Such frameworks can help improve collaborative partnerships for community health and development. First, we outline an interactive model of community empowerment that describes reciprocal influences between personal or group factors and environmental factors in an empowerment process. Second, we describe an iterative framework for the process of empowerment in community partnerships that includes collaborative planning, community action, community change, capacity building, and outcomes, and adaptation, renewal, and institutionalization. Third, we outline activities that are used by community leadership and support organizations to facilitate the process of community empowerment. Fourth, we present case stories of collaborative partnerships for prevention of substance abuse among adolescents to illustrate selected enabling activities. We conclude with a discussion of the challenges and opportunities of facilitating empowerment with collaborative partnerships for community health and development.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health Education and Community Empowerment: Conceptualizing and Measuring Perceptions of Individual, Organizational, and Community ControlHealth Education Quarterly, 1994
- Health Promotion and Empowerment: Reflections on Professional PracticeHealth Education Quarterly, 1994
- The impact of the Safe Kids/Healthy Neighborhoods Injury Prevention Program in Harlem, 1988 through 1991.American Journal of Public Health, 1994
- Theory and the Empowerment of Health Education PractitionersHealth Education Quarterly, 1992
- Powerlessness, Empowerment, and Health: Implications for Health Promotion ProgramsAmerican Journal of Health Promotion, 1992
- How to Institutionalize Health Promotion ProgramsAmerican Journal of Health Promotion, 1989
- Small wins: Redefining the scale of social problems.American Psychologist, 1984
- Preventing psychopathology and promoting human potential.American Psychologist, 1982
- In praise of paradox: A social policy of empowerment over preventionAmerican Journal of Community Psychology, 1981
- Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A Partial TheoryAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1977