Maji Hailemariam, T. Bustos, Julia Felton, Kent D Key, DeOnica Greer, Bernadel L. Jefferson, Janice Muhammud, Dewaun Robinson, Sharon Saddler, B. Spencer, Raven Miller, Fallon J. Richie, Monicia Summers, Jonne McCoy-White, Jennifer Johnson
{"title":"“我们从最糟糕的情况中反弹”:弗林特妇女研究中确定的弗林特地区妇女资产","authors":"Maji Hailemariam, T. Bustos, Julia Felton, Kent D Key, DeOnica Greer, Bernadel L. Jefferson, Janice Muhammud, Dewaun Robinson, Sharon Saddler, B. Spencer, Raven Miller, Fallon J. Richie, Monicia Summers, Jonne McCoy-White, Jennifer Johnson","doi":"10.1080/10705422.2023.2189901","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT Economically disadvantaged communities experience disproportionate health and social challenges relative to more affluent areas. This study describes ways women support and give back to their community in a minority-majority community experiencing social, economic and health challenges. We conducted qualitative interviews with 100 women and human service providers serving women in Flint, Genesee County, Michigan. Using methods aligned with community-based participatory research, a group of community and academic partners analyzed the data. Participants noted several personal characteristics of women they identified as assets including resilience, strength, resourcefulness, creativity, determination, tenacity, wisdom and the ability to nurture others. We think these personal characteristics represent individual assets that help women in Flint survive and build social capital. Women reported developing their social capital through giving, collaborating and sharing their skills with people in their personal networks. Significant personal assets in the form of individual characteristics already exist within Flint. Even in an area characterized as having health and economic challenges, women in this study were able to leverage their personal assets to build social capital and to mobilize resources for their benefit and the benefit of the community.","PeriodicalId":46385,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Community Practice","volume":"31 1","pages":"82 - 104"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"“We bounce back from the worst of the worst”: assets of Flint-area women identified in the Flint Women’s Study\",\"authors\":\"Maji Hailemariam, T. Bustos, Julia Felton, Kent D Key, DeOnica Greer, Bernadel L. Jefferson, Janice Muhammud, Dewaun Robinson, Sharon Saddler, B. Spencer, Raven Miller, Fallon J. 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“We bounce back from the worst of the worst”: assets of Flint-area women identified in the Flint Women’s Study
ABSTRACT Economically disadvantaged communities experience disproportionate health and social challenges relative to more affluent areas. This study describes ways women support and give back to their community in a minority-majority community experiencing social, economic and health challenges. We conducted qualitative interviews with 100 women and human service providers serving women in Flint, Genesee County, Michigan. Using methods aligned with community-based participatory research, a group of community and academic partners analyzed the data. Participants noted several personal characteristics of women they identified as assets including resilience, strength, resourcefulness, creativity, determination, tenacity, wisdom and the ability to nurture others. We think these personal characteristics represent individual assets that help women in Flint survive and build social capital. Women reported developing their social capital through giving, collaborating and sharing their skills with people in their personal networks. Significant personal assets in the form of individual characteristics already exist within Flint. Even in an area characterized as having health and economic challenges, women in this study were able to leverage their personal assets to build social capital and to mobilize resources for their benefit and the benefit of the community.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Community Practice is an interdisciplinary journal grounded in social work. It is designed to provide a forum for community practice, including community organizing, planning, social administration, organizational development, community development, and social change. The journal contributes to the advancement of knowledge related to numerous disciplines, including social work and the social sciences, urban planning, social and economic development, community organizing, policy analysis, urban and rural sociology, community health, public administration, and nonprofit management. As a forum for authors and a resource for readers, this journal makes an invaluable contribution to the community"s conceptualization, applications, and practice.