ABSTRACT

This handbook sets a new research agenda in community development. The contributors redefine existing areas within the context of interdisciplinary research, highlight emerging areas for community development related research, and provide researchers and post-graduate students with ideas and encouragement for future research activity. To do this, the editors have deliberately chosen to frame this book not through a traditional sociological lens of class, race and gender, but through a "Wicked Problems" framework.

Drawing upon the work of 37 international authors, in diverse settings such as West Papua, Peru, the USA and Australia; and with methodologies equally as diverse, from case studies and interviews to the use of music and story-telling, this handbook focuses upon five Wicked Problems: forced displacement; family, gender and child related violence; indigenous marginalisation; climate change and food security; and human survival in the context of disaster and recovery work.

By drawing together leading scholars from community development, social work and social policy, this handbook provides an up to the minute snapshot of current scholarship as well as signposting several fruitful avenues for future research. This book is both an invaluable resource for both scholars and practitioners and an indispensable teaching tool for use in the classroom and in the field.

part |19 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

Wicked Problems and community development

An introductory essay

part I|48 pages

Forced displacement

chapter 3|14 pages

They’d just “flown away”

Reflections on shifting gender norms in the context of engagement with asylum seekers and refugees through community music

chapter 4|14 pages

Underestimating legacy

Lessons learned from mining-caused displacement and resettlement

part II|46 pages

Family, gender and child-related violence

chapter 5|13 pages

What role for community?

Critical reflections on state-driven support for vulnerable children and orphans in South Africa

chapter 7|16 pages

Preventing violence against women

Researching the development and evolution of an integrated CALD community family violence project

part III|79 pages

Indigenous marginalisation

chapter 8|16 pages

Storying unarmed insurgencies

Collective narrative methods for researching civil resistance

chapter 9|13 pages

“Singing on country and singing for country”

Music in work with Australian Aboriginal communities

chapter 10|15 pages

Complicating dynamics

Adapting the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework to a remote Indigenous context in Australia

chapter 11|20 pages

The Martu Leadership Program

Community-led development and experimentalism

part IV|41 pages

Food and climate

chapter 13|13 pages

Stories of climate-induced mobility

Responses, challenges and the need for an institutional framework to guide these transitions

chapter 14|13 pages

Food sovereignty and community economies

Researching a Spanish case study

chapter 15|13 pages

Carving out space for community gardens in Australia

Exploring the potential of community gardens as social movements for urban change in Sydney and Canberra

part V|45 pages

Survival development

chapter 16|14 pages

The place of schools in building community cohesion and resilience

Lessons from a disaster context

chapter 17|14 pages

From “dilemmatic space” towards ecological practice

Community development in disaster recovery in Queensland, Australia

chapter 18|15 pages

Hurricanes, oil and rising water

The role and work of community development in coastal Louisiana in the intersection of disasters, recovery and planning for the future

part |10 pages

Conclusion

chapter 19|8 pages

What have we learned?

A concluding essay on Wicked Problems, research and the contributions of community development