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      Empowerment meets narrative: listening to stories and creating settings.

      American Journal of Community Psychology
      Community Networks, Consumer Organizations, Consumer Participation, Humans, Organizational Culture, Power (Psychology), Social Change, Social Problems, prevention & control

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          Abstract

          Comments on and summarizes some of the themes of a special issue on empowerment. Extends empowerment theory with the suggestion that both research and practice would benefit from a narrative approach that links process to practice and attends to the voices of the people of interest. Narrative theory and method tends to open the field to a more inclusive attitude as to what counts as data and to cross-disciplinary insights as well as citizen collaboration. Communal narratives are defined at various levels of analysis, including the community, the organizational, and the cultural. A definition of empowerment that includes a concern with resources calls attention to the fact that communal narratives and personal stories are resources. Implications for personal and social change are suggested.

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