The Community Economic Development Movement : Law, Business, and the New Social Policy

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The Community Economic Development Movement : Law, Business, and the New Social Policy

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 240 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780822328155
  • DDC分類 361.610973

Full Description

While traditional welfare efforts have waned, a new style of social policy implementation has emerged dramatically in recent decades. The new style is reflected in a panoply of Community Economic Development (ced) initiatives—efforts led by locally-based organizations to develop housing, jobs, and business opportunities in low-income neighborhoods.
In this book William H. Simon provides the first comprehensive examination of the evolution of Community Economic Development, complete with an analysis of its operating premises and strategies. He describes the profusion of new institutional forms that have arisen from the movement, amalgamations that cut across conventional distinctions—such as those between private and public—and that encompass the efforts of nonprofits, cooperatives, churches, business corporations, and public agencies. Combining local political mobilization with entrepreneurial initiative and electoral accountability with market competition, this phenomenon has catalyzed new forms of property rights designed to motivate investment and civic participation while curbing the dangers of speculation and middle-class flight.
With its examination of many localities and its appraisal of the strengths and weaknesses of the prevailing approach to Community Economic Development, this book will be a valuable resource for local housing, job, and business development officials; community activists; and students of law, business, and social policy.

Contents

Acknowledgments

1. Introduction

2. Background: The Turn to Community-Based Organizations in Social Policy

3. Three Logics of Community Action

4. The Community as Beneficiary of Economic Development

5. The Community as Agent of Economic Development

6. Constrained Property: Rights as Anchors

7. Induced Mobilization

8. Institutional Hybridization

9. The Limits of CED

Index