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two - Family roles in community matters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 2022

Anne Power
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
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Summary

I just liked the area from the moment I arrived for my interview at the school. I just walked up the road and thought ‘I like it here’, which was totally illogical, because it isn't a nice area to look at. It's tower blocks and mid-rise and litter. But I think it's something about the community feel that is what I’ve always liked about it and the fact that you see a lot of people that you know when you just go out somewhere. There's lots of people who you’ll stop and just say hello to, and the friendly sense of it. Which I guess people might not expect to find in London. (Jane, West City)

Community spirit matters because it's really multi-cultural and families and people live together. It's nice walking round and you bump into someone and they’re nice to you. (Fatima, The Valley)

Introduction: Community spirit

People have many views on what community itself means and why it is important. Parents identify a sense of community in a friendly atmosphere, a sense of trust and reciprocity, a link to neighbours and to local activity, a helping hand, mutual support and a sense of responsibility. It is these social links that reflect what families think of as ‘community spirit’, a somewhat ephemeral feeling about local social relations. Mothers often use the terms ‘community’ and ‘community spirit’ interchangeably.

This chapter explores how the parents we talked to feel about their local community, how much they can control or shape what happens in it, what efforts they make as parents to get involved and help the community work better, who else they rely on and what undermines the sense of community. It looks at the role of special programmes for parents and children, using Sure Start as an illustration of community support in action.

The existence of ‘community spirit’ was clearly important to families from our first visit and was a recurring theme in ideas about what would help families and children. Parents talked about their community and held strong views about it because for them it made where they lived succeed or fail as a place to bring up children.

Type
Chapter
Information
Family Futures
Childhood and Poverty in Urban Neighbourhoods
, pp. 17 - 52
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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