Asset-Based Community Development
Asset-based community development (ABCD) is an approach to community practice that begins by identifying and mobilizing the strengths a community already possesses — the skills of its residents, the energy of its associations, and the resources of its institutions — rather than starting from a catalogue of its problems and deficits. Articulated by John Kretzmann and John McKnight in their 1993 book Building Communities from the Inside Out, ABCD reframes community members from clients and recipients of services into citizens and producers of their own development, and is a cornerstone of strengths-based community social work.
سوابق منبع
استنادات عیناً از سوابق منبع روش کپی شدهاند. هیچ تأیید در سطح ادعا از آنها استنباط نمیشود.
- Kretzmann, J. P., & McKnight, J. L. (1993). Building Communities from the Inside Out: A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing a Community's Assets. ACTA Publications / Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University. · ISBN 9780879461089
- Mathie, A., & Cunningham, G. (2003). From clients to citizens: Asset-based community development as a strategy for community-driven development. Development in Practice, 13(5), 474–486. · DOI 10.1080/0961452032000125857
ادعاهای گزینششده
ادعاها در دفتر ثبت شواهد ذخیره شدهاند، هر کدام با ارزیابی خاص خود.
این نما در صورت عدم وجود ارزیابی ادعا در دفتر ثبت، ادعایی ابداع نمیکند.
روشهای مرتبط
از گراف روش تولید شده و به عنوان روابط پیشنهادی ماشین نمایش داده میشود — هیچ ادعای مدرکی استنباط نمیشود.