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Urban Greening and Social Benefits: a Study of Empowerment Outcomes

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

"This paper provides a framework in which to consider social benefits of urban and community forestry projects. The framework clarifies who gets the benefits—An individual? An organization? A community? Further, the benefits can be derived from passive and/or active experience of the urban forest. Examples of social benefits in each category are reviewed. The paper also presents findings from a research project that investigated practitioner claims for social benefits of urban greening projects. Practitioner assessments of the benefits received modest support in the research findings, but their assessments were not entirely accurate, leading to some true and some false claims of social benefits. Empowerment theory structured the investigation and analysis and provided insight for implementation of projects that aim for providing social benefits. The concepts of empowering versus empowered people were particularly helpful. Specifically, the empowering nature of each site’s project organizer, the openness of the project process, and the overall organizing history of the block were important to achieving empowerment outcomes. The paper concludes with recommendations for practitioners interested in fostering empowerment through urban and community forestry projects."

Authors
L.M. Westphal
Date Published
2003
Journal/Conference
Journal of Arboriculture
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
Publisher Location
Champaign, IL (US)
ISBN/ISSN
0278-5226
Volume
29
Number
3
Issue
May 2003
Start Page
137
End Page
147
Sub-Topics
Social and Cultural Impacts
State(s)/Region(s)
National
Keywords
Social

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