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Community development in the second Trump era Ruth has a strong memory of a story once told by her German language teacher when she was a student at secondary school. Her teacher had attended universit

[OPEN-ACCESS] Our Co-Editors Ruth Pearce & Kirsty Lohman write in the Editorial for our April '25 issue, on challenges to global community development practice in the Second Trump Era, on bottom-up organising and information-sharing, and the excellent content available in this issue #CDJ #Editorial

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Asset-based Community Development (ABCD): in Conversation with John McKnight about the Heritage of ABCD and its Place in the World Today (3rd edition) The asset-based approach incorporates new, more holistic, and creative ways of looking at reality, such as seeing the glass half full, appreciating what ha

Annisa Rizqa Alamri et al review "Asset-based Community Development (ABCD): in Conversation with John McKnight about the Heritage of ABCD and its Place in the World Today (3rd edition)" in our July '25 issue buff.ly/VXEAUi9 #CDJ #BookReviews

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Community development, social action and social planning: a practical guide As someone active in various roles in the broad community development field for over fifty years, I have seen various editions of this book – this is the s

Gary Craig reviews "Community development, social action and social planning: a practical guide", edited by Alan Twelvetrees and Russell Todd, in our July issue buff.ly/uV3F4OU #CDJ #BookReviews

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Implementation of community-based rehabilitation in Colombia in mental health: barriers, facilitators, and purposes

Felipe Agudelo-Hernández et al write in Vol. 60, Issue 3 on community-based rehabilitation for mental health conditions in Colombia, and the importance of fostering dialogue between communities and decision-makers in programme implementation buff.ly/JGNn98G #CDJ #MentalHealth

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The politics of ward committees in enhancing community development through democratic participation in the perspective of structuration Abstract. The paper aims to explore the politics of ward committees in enhancing community development through participation. In post-1994 South Africa, wa

Nsizwazonke E Yende , Petunia B Mahlangu & Andiswa Mkhwanazi write in our July '25 issue on ward committees in South Africa, and how perceptions of committees as "watchdogs" affect their ability to fulfil their constitutional mandate buff.ly/16xuHVg #CDJ #SouthAfrica

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Reproducing poverty through participation: examining the constraints of community development strategies in fostering empowerment and social change

Editor's Choice in Vol. 60, Issue 3, Shahzad Khan & Robyn Eversole write on the Rural Support Programmes Network in Northwest Pakistan, and the limits of active participation in catalysing empowerment in community development practice buff.ly/yzm0cOB #CDJ #Pakistan

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Community resilience through bottom–up participation: when civil society drives urban transformation processes Abstract. In recent years, bottom–up civil society initiatives have advanced urban transformation processes in Berlin. Following previous research suggesti

Nicolina Kirby, Dorota Stasiak & Dirk von Schneidemesser write in our July '25 issue on Berlin-based civil society initiatives, and the impact on community resilience that bottom-up approaches led by civil society can have buff.ly/ZcXqtBS #CDJ #Resilience

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Implementability: a taxonomy of community development approaches

[OPEN-ACCESS] Geoff Higgins and co-authors write in our July '25 issue on implementability in community development approaches, and the novel taxonomy of principles, conditions and processes for success buff.ly/x4d6vqx #CDJ #Development

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What’s (in) a CBO? Analyzing community representation in the Kenyan aid chain

Maaike Matelski & Lise Woensdregt write in our July '25 issue on community-based organisations in Kenya, the highly-varied forms these organisations take, and how communities are represented in Kenyan aid chains #CDJ #Kenya

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Deployment and development of community wealth building in Canadian mid-sized cities

Audrey Jamal and Jordan Scholten write in our July '25 issue on community wealth-building in mid-size Canadian cities, and the lack of embeddedness of CWB practice in economic development policy buff.ly/5lHHEPe #CDJ #CWB

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A Freirean understanding of the Venezuelan crisis in Trinidad and Tobago

Kola Adeosun writes in our July '25 issue on the humanitarian crisis in Venezuela and the impacts on Trinidad and Tobago, where many displaced Venezuelans reside, using Paolo Freire’s ideas of critical consciousness buff.ly/H1KRdxm #CDJ #Friere

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A Freirean watershed

Peter Mayo writes in our latest Classic Texts article on Ira Shor and Paulo Freire’s "Pedagogy of Liberation. Dialogues on Transforming Education", and the impact of this seminal work on community development and critical sociology buff.ly/9XaClcf #CDJ #ClassicText

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Claiming space

Our Co-Editors Ruth Pearce and Kirsty Lohman write in our July '25 Editorial on the claiming of space by community organisations, self-organisations, and how "cracks" can lead to "tiny victories" buff.ly/C5MC4ZS #CDJ #Editorial

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It's Not Where You Live, It's How You Live: Class and Gender Struggles in a Dublin Estate John Bissett has been a community worker for over three decades and is a seasoned activist who has played a prominent role in anti-austerity, housing and d

Fergal Finnegan reviews "It's Not Where You Live, It's How You Live: Class and Gender Struggles in a Dublin Estate", edited by John Bissett, in our latest issue buff.ly/zCRdEhj #CDJ #BookReviews

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Living with disasters: communities and development in the Indian Sundarbans This important book explores contemporary ‘livelihood’ initiatives in the enduring disaster-prone region that is India’s ‘Sundarbans’ – an active delta spr

Nikita Agarwalla reviews "Living with disasters: communities and development in the Indian Sundarbans", edited by Amites Mukhopadhyay, in our latest issue buff.ly/H0YddCI #CDJ #BookReviews

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For, of, and by the community: critical place-based reflections on mangroves regeneration in the Indian Sundarbans

Amrita Sen and co-authors write in Vol. 60, Iss. 4 of the CDJ on mangrove regeneration programmes in the Indian Sundarbans, and how combined institutional/community approaches and knowledge exchange can enhance outcomes, as well as empower communities buff.ly/U1F4qym #CDJ #Sundarbans

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Effect of homestead land titling programme on most vulnerable Adivasis: the case of the Lodhas of West Bengal Abstract. India has seventy-five extremely vulnerable tribal communities that are officially recognized as particularly vulnerable tribal groups (PVTGs). C

Sudipta Biswas & Sukumar Pal write in Vol. 60, Iss. 4 of the CDJ on Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups in India, and examines the effect of homestead titling programs in West Bengal on the lives of tribal groups in the state buff.ly/EWJ8mjT #CDJ #India

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Application of new genre public art in community empowerment: a case study of Chongqing Tie Lu San Cun Village, China AbstractPurpose. This paper aims to explore the necessity of using new genre public art (NGPA) to enhance community empowerment based on the characteristic

Guanxi Chen & Min Lee write in our latest issue on community empowerment through New Genre Public Art (NGPA), and how application of new public art forms can enhance community empowerment buff.ly/6Lwa7tN #CDJ #Chongqing

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From heavy rains to radical pedagogies: contesting housing injustice and environmental risk in Mauá, Brazil Abstract. In the peripheries of southern metropolises, vulnerable households living in precarious housing often suffer from climatic events such as heavy r

[OPEN-ACCESS] Mateus Lira writes in our latest issue on housing injustice in Mauá, Brazil, and how radical pedagogies have emerged in informal settlements around environmental injustices, and play a fundamental role in territorial contestations buff.ly/Mv37u36 #CDJ #Brazil

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Mapas Parlantes: collective visual methods to map and re−/construct urban memories Abstract. This article reflects on the generative potential of visual methods to collectively construct and re-construct intergenerational urban memories r

[OPEN-ACCESS] Cristian Olmos Herrera and co-authors write in our latest Special Section on the intergenerational urban memories of the Chilean community in Vienna, Austria, and the potential of visual methods to construct and re-construct memory buff.ly/3RTvvVY #CDJ #VisualMethods

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Pedagogical anarchitectures: critical practices and territorial contestations in the Spatial Academy of Santiago de Chile Abstract. This paper learns from the Spatial Academy at Universidad de Las Américas in Santiago de Chile, reflecting on it as a model of radical pedagogy t

Francisco Vergara-Perucich & Camillo Boano explore radical architectural pedagogies from the Spatial Academy of Santiago de Chile, and the role of architects as social-spatial mediators buff.ly/VA9mDTj #CDJ #Architecture

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Spatial thought and radical pedagogies Abstract. The integration of spatial thought, radical pedagogies, and Mapuche cosmopolitics offers a transformative vision for education. By recognizing th

Isabel Serra & Carolina Meza write in our latest issue on how space shapes human experience, focusing on Mapuche spaces, places and territory, and radical, decolonising pedagogies buff.ly/Xu3y3wD #CDJ #Radical #Pedagogy

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Le #CDJ, qui se prononce ainsi pour la première fois sur le recours à l’IA générative dans l’information, a constaté que Ventures Media avait enfreint gravement la déontologie en diffusant des contenus générés par IA, signés par de faux profils de journalistes ⚠️

➡️ www.lecdj.be/fr/le-cdj-a-...

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Towards situated learning: Luiz Gama Human Rights Clinic and urban realities at the University of São Paulo Law School Abstract. This article critically examines the pedagogical potential of a territorially grounded approach to human rights education. To do so, it analyses

[OPEN-ACCESS] Editor's Choice in our latest issue, Laura Cavalcanti Salatino and co-authors explore the pedagogies of the Luiz Gama Human Rights Clinic, and the benefits of territorially-engaged legal pedagogies buff.ly/3afpSNv #CDJ #Brazil #HumanRights

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Radical pedagogies for territorial contestations Abstract. This editorial introduces a Special Section that repositions radical pedagogy at the centre of contemporary territorial contestations. It argues

Francisco Vergara Perucich, Martin Arias-Loyola & Camillo Boano write in the second Editorial for our latest issue, exploring radical pedagogies for territorial contestations, and how pedagogy is a primary site of political praxis in today's world buff.ly/vxWY3iK #CDJ #Editorial

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Volume 60 Issue 4 | Community Development Journal | Oxford Academic Publishing research on a wide range of topics, the journal adopts a broad definition of community development to include policy, planning and action as they impact on the life of communities.

Vol. 60, Issue 4 of the CDJ is out now! Find all of the papers from our latest issue on our OUP homepage buff.ly/2AfVroA #CDJ #LatestIssue

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Engendering Democracy in Africa: Women, Politics and Development: Niamh Gaynor, Routledge, London, 2022. 1st edn. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003147879 Following decades of global commitments, pledges, high rhetoric, grand commentary and global strategies in international and global development policy, pol

Susan P Murphy reviews "Engendering Democracy in Africa: Women, Politics and Development", by Niamh Gaynor, in our April '25 issue buff.ly/3tnGuM0 #CDJ #BookReviews

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Liveable lives: living and surviving LGBTQ equalities in India and the UK The book under review is about the liveability of LGBTQ communities. Through a transnational collaborative research project, ‘Making Liveable Lives: Rethin

Pushpesh Kumar reviews "Liveable lives: living and surviving LGBTQ equalities in India and the UK", edited by Niharika Banerjea and Kath Browne, in our April '25 issue buff.ly/YHRIfwN #CDJ #BookReviews

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Lifeways of families in coffee-growing territories: vulnerability and response capacity Abstract. Multilateral and research organizations have developed studies in coffee-growing zones that are focused on sustainable livelihoods; however, the

Obeimar B Herrera and co-authors examine the lifeways and territorial innovation approach to sustainable livelihoods in coffee-growing territories, and the contextual responses to external challenges across these territories buff.ly/Rs8tY8c #CDJ #Innovation #Livelihooods

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Revitalizing community empowerment: harnessing the synergy of faith-based NGOs and Laverack’s domain approach Abstract. This research investigated the community empowerment initiatives of Islamic Relief (IR) Bangladesh, a faith-based non-governmental organization (

Shofiqur Rahman Chowdhury & M Rezaul Islam write in our April '25 issue on community empowerment, and the synergies between faith-based organisations and Laverack's domain approach to empowerment, through the case of the Action for Peoples Rights and Livelihoods (APRIL) project buff.ly/DSXd1YY #CDJ

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