http://hdl.handle.net/1765/7226
series: ESM-dissertation-011

From Social Engineering to Social Movement: power sharing in community change in New York’s Hudson Valley and Catskill Mountains

(Van sociale constructie naar sociale beweging: gedeelde macht in veranderingsprocessen in de Hudson Valley en de Catskill Mountains gemeenschappen van New York)


Doctoral Thesis
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Sustainable economic development at the local level could be a common ground for citizens and a arena for effective civic innovation across the United States. To realize this potential, local economic and political institutions must shift approaches from "social engineering" to "social Movement". That is: rely less on the efforts of the few in formal positions of leadership, in favor of a more inclusive, generative collaboration among stakeholders. How does this take place? New York's Catskill Mountains and Mid-Hudson Valley form the study region. Qualitative, naturalistics, interview-based research compares and contrasts two non-traditional development agencies - the Catskill Mountain Foundation and Watershed Agricultural Council - and a local government, in Marbletown, that has been painstakingly redesigned over more than ten years to incorporate a wide range of citizen inputs and engagement. Easch community aspires to sustainable development, has achieved significant results, and now faces new challenges in maintaining participation to avoid fostering dependency.



Keywords


Automatically Extracted Terms
  • community
  • development
  • group
  • process
  • study
  • catskill
  • research
  • structure
  • organization
  • business
  • resource
  • program
  • change
  • citizen
  • government
  • region
  • marbletown
  • relationship
  • system
  • agency