Valuing the Aspirations of the Community: The Origins of a Community–University Partnership

J. Winfield, Sara Fiorot, C. Pressimone, Bęćkowski, J. E. Davis
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Abstract

Universities are increasingly prioritizing engagement and collaboration with their local communities. While such partnerships can be mutually beneficial, they can often perpetuate and exacerbate power differentials, particularly when the community partners belong to racially minoritized groups. This qualitative paper examines the founding of a community–university partnership between a Black, low-income community and a predominantly White university. Through the theoretical framework of aspirational capital, we find that valuing the experiences and aspirations of the community helped establish a more equitable partnership forged to support a community-led, culturally relevant after-school program. Centering the aspirations of Black community members and the epistemologies of the Black women on the program staff also served to acknowledge and address power imbalances at the founding stages of the partnership. Recognizing and valuing the aspirational capital of community members also positively impacted the university-based staff’s ability to function as boundary spanners between the university and community who could adequately articulate the desires and needs of program staff. We argue that by recognizing and valuing the aspirational capital already present in low-income Black communities, universities can create more equitable partnerships for positive social change.
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重视社区的愿望:社区与大学伙伴关系的起源
大学越来越重视与当地社区的接触和合作。虽然这种伙伴关系可能是互利的,但它们往往会使权力差距长期存在并加剧,尤其是当社区伙伴属于种族少数群体时。这篇定性论文考察了黑人、低收入社区和以白人为主的大学之间建立社区-大学伙伴关系的情况。通过理想资本的理论框架,我们发现,重视社区的经验和愿望有助于建立更公平的伙伴关系,以支持社区主导的、与文化相关的课后计划。将黑人社区成员的愿望和黑人女性的认识论集中在项目工作人员身上,也有助于承认和解决伙伴关系成立阶段的权力失衡问题。认识和重视社区成员的抱负资本也对大学工作人员作为大学和社区之间的边界人发挥作用的能力产生了积极影响,他们能够充分表达项目工作人员的愿望和需求。我们认为,通过承认和重视低收入黑人社区已经存在的有抱负的资本,大学可以为积极的社会变革建立更公平的伙伴关系。
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