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Community Development
First Name Last Name
Department, Bow Valley College
Course Code: Course Name
Instructor’s Name
Due Date
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Community Development
Life expectancy, wealth creation and general economic and political development in
developed countries across the globe. However, studies reveal that the focus on wealth creation
and the stabilization of political and economic aspects of life limits the potential to develop
mutual responsibility in caring for one another within family groups or communities (He et al.,
2020). Individuals opt to buy the services they need using their economic and political influence;
hence, it increases the culture of loneliness and non-participation in the local communities.
Individualism in society limits the potential to achieve diverse and cross-level socio-political and
economic growth among members of society (He et al., 2020). Community development
endeavors to mitigate the unintended consequence of affluence, good health and long lives such
as high cases of anxiety, depression and poor well-being.
Community development remains a holistic approach and a structured determination to
help a group of people in a community to lead a socio-economically, politically and culturally
improved life. The terminology combines community with a development that endeavors to
improve the living standards of the members of society (Daniels et al., 2020). The success of
community development effort lies in the faith, commitment, and dedication of the members of
community in working together to enhance livelihoods. The participatory aspect of community
development demands the involvement of members of society from the conception to the
implementation of policies geared towards sustainable growth and development (He et al., 2020).
Community development ensures that local people take an active position in defining their issues
and taking the necessary measures to fix the challenges.
Community development operates on the backdrop of the principles of sustainable
development, empowerment, inclusivity, human rights, social justice, and equality. The aim of
community development remains the identification and mitigation of challenges and gaps that
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deny members of the Australian community the access to socio-political, cultural, and economic
opportunities (He et al., 2020). The inclusivity aspect of community development requires active
participation of the members of society from the selection of issues, implementation, and
execution to identify and decide on the ideal approaches for effective mitigation (Daniels et al.,
2020). Furthermore, the participation of the members of local communities in addressing the
issues they face guarantees the elimination of discrimination and inequality – aspects that
continue to deny deserving Australians the opportunity to contribute in solving challenges in
society.
Community development refers to the process community members initiate and engages
in collective endeavors that guarantees to accord them socio-cultural, economic, and political
growth and development. Community development initiatives run with or without the input of a
community development professional or agency (Westoby, 2019). The aim of community
development remains the empowerment of community members and the creation of stronger and
highly connected communities. It also denotes planned effort to build assets that enhance the
capacity of residents to improve the quality of their lives. Target assets may include different
forms of community capital such as physical, human, social, financial, environmental, and
cultural assets (Westoby & Harris, 2020). Community development applies the community
capital to enable practical response to local needs and opportunities.
Community members remain the experts in community development because the
members of community possess the highest understanding of their lives and communities. They
also value community knowledge and wisdom. The members of society lead the community
development programs at every stage – they decide, select, implement and evaluate issues and
relating mitigation strategies (Westoby & Harris, 2020). The members of community develop
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and deliver development programs in partnership with participants and stakeholders such as
organizations, individuals, and agencies. Still, the selection of participants and stakeholders rides
on the commonality in goals, objectives and the availability of resources to support the course.
The individualistic approach in sorting the socio-economic and political challenges such as
poverty, underrepresentation, exclusion and disenfranchisement continues to prove unreliable
because it encourages the vices it purports to address (Westoby, 2019). Community development
promises to provide cross-board mitigation to the challenges faced by members of society.
Government and private stakeholders continue to invest human and financial resources to
support effort by community development organizations because of the positive outcomes
associated with the operations of the groups. Some of the importance of community development
includes the continued stirring and the inspiration of a holistic socio-economic, political and
cultural growth within communities in Australia (Shields et al., 2021). Community development
provides an enabling environment for members of community to participate through the analysis
and selection of issues of concern for mitigation through a collective approach. For example,
initiatives by community development organizations contribute in addressing the problem of
housing in Australia (Haricharan et al., 2021). It also creates an enabling environment for
mitigating the problem of crime in local communities by providing alternative sources of income
for the unemployed members of the Australian community.
Exclusion and socio-economic and political disenfranchisement remain some of the
critical issues that affect members of the Australian community. Studies reveal that despite the
advancement in the potential to access opportunities, about 36% of members of the local
communities lack accessibility to critical government services such as education, health, and
security (Haricharan et al., 2021). Community development facilitates the development and
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implementation of structures that promote inclusivity and diversity by according individuals a
voice in the decision-making table on matters affecting their lives. Community development
compels the government and policy-makers to listen and consider the needs of the
disenfranchised members of community. Finally, community development ensures the
identification and reduction of duplicate efforts geared towards addressing the challenges faced
in society (Shields et al., 2021). It gives stakeholders the platform to tailor and combine effort in
addressing challenges in the community.
Community development workers contribute extensively in the mitigation of the socio-
cultural, economic and political challenges faced in society. First, community development
workers research and study the issues affecting local communities to gain a more profound
understanding (Majumdar et al., 2020). Gaining extensive knowledge and understanding of the
issues allows community development workers to initiate and execute active participation in
creating alternative views and approaches to mitigation strategies. Secondly, community
development workers use the information they gather during research to advice policy-makers
and stakeholders on the practical mitigation strategies that would guarantee warranted outcome.
Community development workers use their connections and past experiences to weigh mitigation
options based on tailored needs of the members of society (Gilboa & Weiss-Gal, 2022).
Community development workers remain the backbone in the success of community
development strategies.
The socio-economic, cultural and political advancement of the Australian society
continues to promote the concepts of individualism and loneliness because of the extensive
ability of individuals to fend for themselves at the expense community interaction and
participation. However, loneliness and individualism lead to counter-productive effects such as
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anxiety, depression and the rise in suicide cases among young people. Community development
provides the strategies for identifying and mitigating the socio-cultural and economic challenges
faced in society through active involvement of the affected individuals. Community development
workers use their extensive knowledge and understanding of the societal issues to promote their
mitigation.
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References
Daniels, E., Bharwani, S., Gerger Swartling, Å., Vulturius, G., & Brandon, K. (2020).
Refocusing the climate services lens: Introducing a framework for Co-designing
“transdisciplinary knowledge integration processes” to build climate resilience. Climate
Services, 19, 100181. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cliser.2020.100181
Gilboa, C., & Weiss-Gal, I. (2022). Change from within: Community social workers as local
policy actors. The British Journal of Social Work, 52(6), 3540-
3558. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcab263
Haricharan, H. J., Stuttaford, M., & London, L. (2021). The role of community participation in
primary health care: Practices of South African health committees. Primary Health Care
Research & Development, 22. https://doi.org/10.1017/s146342362100027x
He, Y., Yu, H., Ong, E., Wang, Y., Liu, Y., Huffman, A., Huang, H., Beverley, J., Hur, J.,
Yang, X., Chen, L., Omenn, G. S., Athey, B., & Smith, B. (2020). CIDO, a community-
based ontology for coronavirus disease knowledge and data integration, sharing, and
analysis. Scientific Data, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-020-0523-6
Majumdar, A., Shaw, M., & Sinha, S. K. (2020). COVID-19 debunks the myth of socially
sustainable supply chain: A case of the clothing industry in South Asian
countries. Sustainable Production and Consumption, 24, 150-
155. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2020.07.001
Shields, K. F., Moffa, M., Behnke, N. L., Kelly, E., Klug, T., Lee, K., Cronk, R., & Bartram, J.
(2021). Community management does not equate to participation: Fostering community
participation in rural water supplies. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for
Development, 11(6), 937-947. https://doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2021.089
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Westoby, P. (2019). ‘A community development yet-to-come’: Jacques derrida and re-
constructing community development praxis. Community Development Journal, 56(3),
375-390. https://doi.org/10.1093/cdj/bsz013
Westoby, P., & Harris, V. (2020). Community development ‘yet-to-come’ during and post the
COVID-19 pandemic: From derrida to Zuboff. Community Development Journal, 55(4),
553-569. https://doi.org/10.1093/cdj/bsaa026