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Serving diverse communities: The role of community initiatives in delivering services to poverty neighbourhoods
AbstractThe recent decades have witnessed a shift from the traditional top-down model of service delivery led by the state to the provision and delivery of services by community organisations. This article explores the extent to which community initiatives in Jane-Finch, a highly diverse, lower income, inner-suburban neighborhoods of Toronto, were successful in achieving their goals, and the relevance of the experience for current neighbourhood initiatives targeting diversity. It discusses the factors which contributed to the effectiveness of 10 analysed initiatives in terms of reaching their primary objectives. The analysis shows that despite the efforts within community initiatives to improve conditions for inhabitants, their impacts remain limited due to underlying structural challenges such as poverty and institutionalised racism, increasing fragmentation within the over-all network of initiatives and precarious funding, which pit programs against one another and hamper effective collaboration and solidarity needed in order to achieve transformative change.
HighlightsCommunity initiatives face similar barriers in providing services to inhabitants.Initiatives in Jane-Finch operate in the face of deep-rooted structural inequality.The most pressing issues facing initiatives are related to funding and support.Fragmentation within initiatives limits the possibility of achieving holistic goals.Structural barriers need to be overcome so as to ensure community participation.
Serving diverse communities: The role of community initiatives in delivering services to poverty neighbourhoods
AbstractThe recent decades have witnessed a shift from the traditional top-down model of service delivery led by the state to the provision and delivery of services by community organisations. This article explores the extent to which community initiatives in Jane-Finch, a highly diverse, lower income, inner-suburban neighborhoods of Toronto, were successful in achieving their goals, and the relevance of the experience for current neighbourhood initiatives targeting diversity. It discusses the factors which contributed to the effectiveness of 10 analysed initiatives in terms of reaching their primary objectives. The analysis shows that despite the efforts within community initiatives to improve conditions for inhabitants, their impacts remain limited due to underlying structural challenges such as poverty and institutionalised racism, increasing fragmentation within the over-all network of initiatives and precarious funding, which pit programs against one another and hamper effective collaboration and solidarity needed in order to achieve transformative change.
HighlightsCommunity initiatives face similar barriers in providing services to inhabitants.Initiatives in Jane-Finch operate in the face of deep-rooted structural inequality.The most pressing issues facing initiatives are related to funding and support.Fragmentation within initiatives limits the possibility of achieving holistic goals.Structural barriers need to be overcome so as to ensure community participation.
Serving diverse communities: The role of community initiatives in delivering services to poverty neighbourhoods
Ahmadi, Donya (author)
Cities ; 69 ; 86-94
2017-07-17
9 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Context Effects of Poverty Neighbourhoods on Residents
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1997
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