1. Global strategies
  2. Empowering communities

Empowering communities

  • Progressing community empowerment

Context

The style and substance of a project's initial contact with local communities will have implications for its subsequent ability to handle the issue of "dependency". Many communities equate projects with opportunities for gaining cash; projects that obviously display wealth are likely to reinforce these ideas. Projects must aim at building self-reliance at the local level. Rather than "doing" development, they must provide catalytic support for it. Initial contact with villagers – community entry – is vital as it is the entry point for trust building, information gathering, awareness raising, education and most other project activities.

This strategy features in the framework of Agenda 21 as formulated at UNCED (Rio de Janeiro, 1992), now coordinated by the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development and implemented through national and local authorities. Agenda 21 indicates that empowering communities can be a factor in enabling the poor to achieve economic livelihood.

Claim

Broad public participation should be enabled in all phases in development and redevelopment of settlement. Widespread participation in electoral politics– as voters, candidates and elected officials – is another essential element of sustainable communities because it fosters debate, responsibility and accountability.

Broader

Empowering
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Problem

Value

Empowerment
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Community
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Anticommunity
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Reference

Web link

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #11: Sustainable Cities and Communities

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(C) Cross-sectoral strategies
Subject
  • Society » Communities
  • Content quality
    Unpresentable
     Unpresentable
    Language
    English
    1A4N
    U1168
    DOCID
    13111680
    D7NID
    202961
    Last update
    Aug 2, 2018