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Strengthening community empowerment initiatives as a route to greater equity: an English case study

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Strengthening community empowerment initiatives as a route to greater equity: an English case study. / Heaton, Linda; Halliday, Emma; Wheeler, Paula et al.
In: Community Development Journal, 20.09.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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@article{ed82bcf32fbc4fe0b89f06f7ddc411e6,
title = "Strengthening community empowerment initiatives as a route to greater equity: an English case study",
abstract = "Community empowerment is prominent in global and national policies that aim to increase social and health equity. This paper describes the pathways through which community empowerment could in theory contribute to greater equity and highlights concerns about the potential for current initiatives to deliver positive impacts. Understanding and addressing imbalances in power, valuing knowledge people acquire from their experience of inequalities and supporting people to build alliances beyond the boundaries of their own communities can all contribute to addressing some of the limitations of contemporary empowerment initiatives.An initiative in nine disadvantaged neighbourhoods in NW England sought to address these concerns, through a Community Research and Engagement Network (COREN). The initiative aimed to enhance and direct collective capabilities at action on social inequalities driving health inequalities. The COREN model explicitly considered how local power dynamics could be shifted to enable residents to operate as equals alongside other actors and how their experiential knowledge could be valued as equal to that of professionals and academics. An evaluation highlighted how the COREN had contributed to positive impacts including perceived influence, social connections and feeling valued, alongside cultural, economic, environmental and governance impacts. However, local empowerment initiatives can only be part of the solution to social and health inequalities, as the root causes of these inequalities lie outside the control of people living and working in disadvantaged areas.",
author = "Linda Heaton and Emma Halliday and Paula Wheeler and Adele Ring and Harris Kaloudis and Jennie Popay",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1093/cdj/bsae046",
language = "English",
journal = "Community Development Journal",
issn = "0010-3802",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Strengthening community empowerment initiatives as a route to greater equity

T2 - an English case study

AU - Heaton, Linda

AU - Halliday, Emma

AU - Wheeler, Paula

AU - Ring, Adele

AU - Kaloudis, Harris

AU - Popay, Jennie

PY - 2024/9/20

Y1 - 2024/9/20

N2 - Community empowerment is prominent in global and national policies that aim to increase social and health equity. This paper describes the pathways through which community empowerment could in theory contribute to greater equity and highlights concerns about the potential for current initiatives to deliver positive impacts. Understanding and addressing imbalances in power, valuing knowledge people acquire from their experience of inequalities and supporting people to build alliances beyond the boundaries of their own communities can all contribute to addressing some of the limitations of contemporary empowerment initiatives.An initiative in nine disadvantaged neighbourhoods in NW England sought to address these concerns, through a Community Research and Engagement Network (COREN). The initiative aimed to enhance and direct collective capabilities at action on social inequalities driving health inequalities. The COREN model explicitly considered how local power dynamics could be shifted to enable residents to operate as equals alongside other actors and how their experiential knowledge could be valued as equal to that of professionals and academics. An evaluation highlighted how the COREN had contributed to positive impacts including perceived influence, social connections and feeling valued, alongside cultural, economic, environmental and governance impacts. However, local empowerment initiatives can only be part of the solution to social and health inequalities, as the root causes of these inequalities lie outside the control of people living and working in disadvantaged areas.

AB - Community empowerment is prominent in global and national policies that aim to increase social and health equity. This paper describes the pathways through which community empowerment could in theory contribute to greater equity and highlights concerns about the potential for current initiatives to deliver positive impacts. Understanding and addressing imbalances in power, valuing knowledge people acquire from their experience of inequalities and supporting people to build alliances beyond the boundaries of their own communities can all contribute to addressing some of the limitations of contemporary empowerment initiatives.An initiative in nine disadvantaged neighbourhoods in NW England sought to address these concerns, through a Community Research and Engagement Network (COREN). The initiative aimed to enhance and direct collective capabilities at action on social inequalities driving health inequalities. The COREN model explicitly considered how local power dynamics could be shifted to enable residents to operate as equals alongside other actors and how their experiential knowledge could be valued as equal to that of professionals and academics. An evaluation highlighted how the COREN had contributed to positive impacts including perceived influence, social connections and feeling valued, alongside cultural, economic, environmental and governance impacts. However, local empowerment initiatives can only be part of the solution to social and health inequalities, as the root causes of these inequalities lie outside the control of people living and working in disadvantaged areas.

U2 - 10.1093/cdj/bsae046

DO - 10.1093/cdj/bsae046

M3 - Journal article

JO - Community Development Journal

JF - Community Development Journal

SN - 0010-3802

ER -