Policy Press

Funding, Power and Community Development

Edited by Niamh McCrea and Fergal Finnegan

Published

Jan 23, 2019

Page count

208 pages

Browse the series

Rethinking Community Development

ISBN

978-1447336174

Dimensions

234 x 156 mm

Imprint

Policy Press

Published

Jan 23, 2019

Page count

208 pages

Browse the series

Rethinking Community Development

ISBN

978-1447336150

Dimensions

234 x 156 mm

Imprint

Policy Press

Published

Jan 23, 2019

Page count

208 pages

Browse the series

Rethinking Community Development

ISBN

978-1447336181

Dimensions

Imprint

Policy Press

Published

Jan 23, 2019

Page count

208 pages

Browse the series

Rethinking Community Development

ISBN

978-1447336198

Dimensions

Imprint

Policy Press
Funding, Power and Community Development

In the media

'Funding transformation' in openDemocracy

This edited collection critically explores the funding arrangements governing contemporary community development and how they shape its theory and practice.

International contributions from activists, practitioners and academics consider the evolution of funding in community development and how changes in policy and practice can be understood in relation to the politics of neoliberalism and contemporary efforts to build global democracy from the ‘bottom up’.

Thematically, the collection explores matters such as popular democracy, the shifting contours of the state-market relationship, prospects for democratising the state, the feasibility of community autonomy, the effects of managerialism and hybrid modes of funding such as social finance.

The collection is thus uniquely positioned to stimulate critical debate on both policy and practice within the broad field of community development.

Niamh McCrea is a lecturer at the Department of Humanities, Institute of Technology Carlow, Ireland where she teaches community development, youth work and adult education, with a particular focus on equality studies.

Fergal Finnegan is now a lecturer at the Department of Adult and Community Education, Maynooth University. His research interests include social movements, popular education, biographical research, social class and equality and higher education.

Chapter 1: Funding, power and community development: an introduction, Fergal Finnegan and Niamh McCrea

PART 1: New configurations of power and governance

Chapter 2: Critical issues in philanthropy: power, paradox, possibility and the private foundation, Erica Kohl-Arenas

Chapter 3: ‘Walking the tightrope’: the funding of South African NGOs and the governance of community development, Natascha Mueller-Hirth

Chapter 4: The reinvention of ‘civil society’: transnational conceptions of development in East-Central Europe, Agnes Gagyi and Mariya Ivancheva

Chapter 5: Social finance and community development: exploring egalitarian possibilities, Brendan Murtagh and Niamh Goggin

Chapter 6: Corporate funding and local community development: a case from the mining industry in Australia, Robyn Mayes

PART 2: Questions of state and grassroots democracy

Chapter 7: Funding community organising: diversifying sources, democratising civil society, Robert Fisher and Hélène Balazard

Chapter 8: ‘It is time to re-territorialise utopian thinking’: community, the commons and the funding of autonomous movements in Latin America - An interview with Marcelo Lopes de Souza

PART 3: Modes of agency and horizons of possibility

Chapter 9: Keeping the show on the road: a reflective dialogue between a community worker and a funder, Lin Bender and Japhet Makongo

Chapter 10: Local philanthropy and women’s empowerment: the case of Tewa, the Nepal Women’s Fund, Rita Thapa

Chapter 11: Communities of hope? Gendered re-signification of microcredit in rural India, Debarati Sen and Sarasij Majumder

Chapter 12: Building alternative communities within the state: the Kurdish movement, local municipalities and democratic autonomy, Ulrike Flader and Çetin Gürer