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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Sense of community (SOC) is one of the most
widely used and studied constructs in community psychology.
As proposed by Sarason in (The Psychological
sense of community: prospects for a community psychology,
Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, 1974), SOC represents
the strength of bonding among community members. It is a
valuable component of community life, and it has been
linked to positive mental health outcomes, citizen participation,
and community connectedness. However, promotion
of SOC can become problematic in community
psychology praxis when it conflicts with other core values
proposed to define the field, namely values of human
diversity, cultural relativity, and heterogeneity of experience
and perspective. Several commentators have noted
that promotion of SOC can conflict with multicultural
diversity because it tends to emphasize group member
similarity and appears to be higher in homogeneous communities.
In this paper, we introduce the idea of a community-
diversity dialectic as part of praxis and research in
community psychology. We argue that systematic consideration
of cultural psychology perspectives can guide
efforts to address a community-diversity dialectic and
revise SOC formulations that ultimately will invigorate
community research and action. We provide a working
agenda for addressing this dialectic, proposing that systematic
consideration of the creative tension between SOC
and diversity can be beneficial to community psychology.
Description
Keywords
Sense of community Human diversity Serious mental illness Forced migration Latino immigrants Multiculturalism Community psychology
Citation
American Journal of Community Psychology, 47, 69-85