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Community Development Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions


Question: What are some standard elements in community development?

Answer: Community development includes aspects of community capacity building, citizen participation, consensus building, problem solving, visioning and action planning. Partnerships among private, public and nonprofit entities are created to promote activities supporting community development. These activities might be housing construction, business development, technology initiatives, cooperative development or rehabilitation of structures, to name just a few.

Question: What are some approaches to planning and problem solving?

Answer: Strategic planning has been a common approach to help communities set priorities for community development. Strategic planning may uncover local problems, resource constraints, deficiencies and unmet basic needs to encourage participation and solve problems. A newer approach, using elements of strategic planning, is known in the literature as appreciative inquiry. Appreciative inquiry focuses on a community's achievements rather than its problems, and seeks to go beyond participation to foster inspiration at the grass-roots level.

Question: Where can I find tools or training to help my rural community survive?

Answer:

Question: What is meant by community development?

Answer: Community development is the process of people working together on a local level to improve the economic, social, cultural and environmental conditions in a community. This process includes the conception of ideas as well as the planning and implementation of projects to improve the living standards of people in those communities.

Last reviewed 05/25/2011

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Funding for this project was supported by Grant Number U56RH05539 from the Office of Rural Health Policy, Health Resources and Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents of this website are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the funder.