‘Participation ’ by community members in health-related programmes is an appealing concept that has not always been easy to achieve. Such programmes are often directed towards communities defined on the basis of neighbourhood or group identity. This article aims to develop an account of participation and identity by drawing on Bourdieu’s theory of practice to understand participation as the practice of social identities structured by habitus, capital and field. Examples from interviews with members of one deprived neighbourhood illustrate the theory by showing that people may identify with their neighbourhood for certain social purposes, but have different identity practices in different fields of practice. Implications for community-based ...
In writing about community participation in health, the term 'community' is used loosely and ambiguo...
Recruiting lay people from the neighbourhoods of target communities as Community Health Educators (C...
Place is not a static backdrop for social relationships; rather, it is a dynamic product of the inte...
Community participation in health promotion is one of the central tenets of the WHO's Health For All...
In empowerment and asset-based approaches to community development, the ability to change local resi...
This study critically analyzes and synthesizes community participation (CP) theory across discipline...
Community participation is widely thought to be important in the improvement of healthcare delivery ...
The use of social identity theorising to inform public health interventions is a conceptually salien...
Abstract--Although t e term 'participation ' is widely used in discussing community develo...
Community participation is commonly regarded as pivotal in enabling the success of many health initi...
The importance of moving beyond methodological individualism and epidemiological foci on risk behavi...
This paper takes as its starting point the apparent disjunction between the assumptions of the self-...
Cohesive, resilient communities are vital to the well-being of residents. Uncovering the determinant...
Objective: Present and discuss the contribution of the concept of Community of Practice (CP), while ...
In recent years, research on psycho-social factors in inequalities in health has moved on from an in...
In writing about community participation in health, the term 'community' is used loosely and ambiguo...
Recruiting lay people from the neighbourhoods of target communities as Community Health Educators (C...
Place is not a static backdrop for social relationships; rather, it is a dynamic product of the inte...
Community participation in health promotion is one of the central tenets of the WHO's Health For All...
In empowerment and asset-based approaches to community development, the ability to change local resi...
This study critically analyzes and synthesizes community participation (CP) theory across discipline...
Community participation is widely thought to be important in the improvement of healthcare delivery ...
The use of social identity theorising to inform public health interventions is a conceptually salien...
Abstract--Although t e term 'participation ' is widely used in discussing community develo...
Community participation is commonly regarded as pivotal in enabling the success of many health initi...
The importance of moving beyond methodological individualism and epidemiological foci on risk behavi...
This paper takes as its starting point the apparent disjunction between the assumptions of the self-...
Cohesive, resilient communities are vital to the well-being of residents. Uncovering the determinant...
Objective: Present and discuss the contribution of the concept of Community of Practice (CP), while ...
In recent years, research on psycho-social factors in inequalities in health has moved on from an in...
In writing about community participation in health, the term 'community' is used loosely and ambiguo...
Recruiting lay people from the neighbourhoods of target communities as Community Health Educators (C...
Place is not a static backdrop for social relationships; rather, it is a dynamic product of the inte...