Speaking truth to power: Empowerment ideology as social intervention and policy
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Community Psychology
- Vol. 23 (5) , 765-794
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02506991
Abstract
The popularity, and subsequent ambiguity, in the use of the term “empowerment” has created an even greater need for reassessment in the applied context than in the theory and research literatures. This paper outlines some of the areas of community, organizational, and societal level social intervention and policy ostensibly based on the concept of empowerment. These include neighborhood voluntary associations (for environmental protection, community crime prevention, etc.), self-help groups, competence-building primary prevention, organizational management, health care and educational reforms, and national and international community service and community development policies. Issues in applying social research to community organizations and to legislative and administrative policy making are reviewed. Ten recommendations are offered, including the value of a dialectical analysis, for helping researchers and policy makers/administrators make more effective use of empowerment theory and research.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- The empowerment of women: A key to HIV preventionJournal of Community Psychology, 1993
- Obstacles to and future goals of ten comprehensive community health promotion projectsJournal of Community Health, 1991
- Toward a theory of learned hopefulness: A structural model analysis of participation and empowermentJournal of Research in Personality, 1990
- Editorial introductionCommunity Development Journal, 1990
- Critical Issues in Community Participation in Self-help Housing Programmes. The Experience of FUNDASALCommunity Development Journal, 1990
- Community crime prevention: A review and synthesis of the literatureJustice Quarterly, 1988
- The Empowerment Process: Integrating Theory and PracticeAcademy of Management Review, 1988
- Returning basic research to the community: A relationship between scientist and citizen.American Psychologist, 1983
- An unsuccessful war on poverty?American Psychologist, 1978
- Organization DevelopmentAnnual Review of Psychology, 1974