Asset-based community development explained

Asset-based community development (ABCD) is a methodology for the sustainable development of communities based on their strengths and potentials. It involves assessing the resources, skills, and experience available in a community; organizing the community around issues that move its members into action; and then determining and taking appropriate action.[1] This method uses the community's own assets and resources as the basis for development; it empowers the people of the community by encouraging them to use what they already possess.[2]

The ABCD approach was developed by John L. McKnight and John P. Kretzmann at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. They co-authored a book in 1993, Building Communities from the Inside Out: A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing A Community’s Assets, which outlined their asset-based approach to community development.[3] The Community Development Program at Northwestern University’s Institute for Policy Research established the Asset-Based Community Development Institute based on three decades of research and community work by John P. Kretzmann and John L. McKnight.

Principles

Needs-based community development emphasizes local deficits and looks to outside agencies for resources. In contrast, asset-based community development focuses on honing and leveraging existing strengths within the community.[4] Related to tenets of empowerment, it postulates that solutions to community problems already exist within a community’s assets. Principles that guide ABCD include:

Tools

The ABCD approach uses several tools to assess and mobilize communities.[5]

Capacity inventory

  1. Skills Information: lists the many skills that a person has gained at home, work, in the community, or elsewhere. Examples of these skills can include internet knowledge, hair-cutting, listening, wallpapering, carpentry, sewing, babysitting, etc.[6]
  2. Community Skills: lists the community work in which a person has participated to determine future work they may be interested in.
  3. Enterprising Interests and Experience: lists past experience in business and determines interest in starting a business.
  4. Personal Information: lists minimum information for follow-up.

Asset mapping

There are five key assets in any given community: individuals, associations, institutions, physical assets, and connections.[7] These assets are broken down into three categories: Gifts of individuals, Citizens’ Associations, and Local Institutions. Asset maps are used in lieu of needs maps which focus solely on negative aspects of communities. Asset maps, on the other hand, focus on community assets, abilities, skills, and strengths in order to build its future.

Time banks

Time banks are an example of using community assets to connect individuals' assets to one another.[8] Neighbors and local organizations share skills with one another and earn and spend ‘TimeBank Hours’ or ‘credits’ in the process, allowing an hour of child care to equal an hour of home repair or tax preparation.[8]

Ethics

Since ABCD relies on existing community assets to create change, it has been criticized for implying that disadvantaged communities have all the resources they need to solve community problems.[9] According to the ABCD Institute, however, ABCD methodology recognizes that systemic injustice may require disadvantaged communities to seek assistance from outside the community. ABCD maintains that interventions from exterior sources will be most effective when a community’s assets are leveraged at full capacity. ABCD is described as a more sustainable model of community development than needs-based community development, because needs-based approaches may perpetuate community problems by emphasizing deficiencies and the necessity for reliance on outside assistance. By contrast, ABCD aims to build capacity within communities by expanding their social capital. By working with outside resources and simultaneously building trust within the community, more members can make use of a wider array of strengths.[10]

Examples

There are 17 ABCD sites in Leeds, in the UK, developed under a programme which started in 2013.[11] [12]

See also

References

  1. McKnight. John. John. Kretzmann. Mapping Community Capacity. Northwestern University Institute for Policy Research. Evanston, IL. Revised. 1996. 2016-09-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20161011224806/http://www.abcdinstitute.org/docs/MappingCapacity.pdf. 2016-10-11. dead.
  2. Mathie. Alison. Cameron. Jenny. Gibson. Katherine. Asset-based and citizen-led development: Using a diffracted power lens to analyze the possibilities and challenges. Progress in Development Studies. en. 17. 1. 54–66. 10.1177/1464993416674302. 2017. 157297746. free.
  3. Web site: Asset-Based Community Development Institute. Northwestern University Center for Civic Engagement . 22 February 2015.
  4. Web site: Stan . Rowland . 26 April 2008 . What is Asset Based Community Development (ABCD) . Collaborative of Neighborhood Transformation . 22 February 2015.
  5. Book: Kretzmann. John. McKnight. John. Building Communities From the Inside Out: A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing a Community's Assets. 1993. ACTA Publications. Chicago, IL. 14. 3rd . 978-0-87946-108-9 . 36708153.
  6. Book: McKnight. John. Block. Peter. Peter Block. The Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families and Neighborhoods. 2010. Berrett-Koehler. San Francisco, CA. 1st . 978-1-60509-584-4 . 876604904.
  7. Web site: What is Asset-based community development (ABCD). ABCD Institute. Collaborative for Neighborhood Transformation. 22 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402115208/http://www.abcdinstitute.org/docs/What%20isAssetBasedCommunityDevelopment(1)(3).pdf. 2 April 2015. dead.
  8. Web site: What is Timebanking? . TimeBanks . TimeBanks USA . 22 February 2015 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20150221100136/http://timebanks.org/what-is-timebanking/ . 2015-02-21 . 2014-01-05 .
  9. Ennis. G.. West. Deborah. Exploring the potential of social network analysis in asset-based community development practice and research. Australian Social Work. 2010. 64. 4. 404–417. 10.1080/0312407X.2010.508167. 144025289.
  10. Mathie. Alison. Cunningham. Gord. From clients to citizens: Asset-based Community Development as a strategy for community-driven development. Development in Practice. 2003. 13. 5. 474–486. 10.1080/0961452032000125857. 10.1.1.613.1286. 5781831.
  11. [Leeds City Council]
  12. Yorkshire Reporter, Innovative ABCD in Leeds Programme Set to Widen its Reach as Three New Pathfinder Sites Given Go-Ahead, June 2024, p. 9

Further reading