TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
The Living Communnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnne.pdf
1. THE IMPORTANCE OF UNDERSTANDING
COMMUNITY DYNAMICS AND COMMUNITY ACTION
PREPARED BY: REY S. ARROYO, LPT
C O M M U N I T Y E N G A G E M E N T , S O L I D A R I T Y A N D C I T I Z E N S H I P
2. LEARNING COMPETENCIES
Explain the importance of
studying community dynamics
and community action in relation
to applied social sciences and
students’ future career options.
Develop and affirm sense of
shared identity and willingness to
contribute to the attainment of
the common good.
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DO YOU EVER FEEL SMALL
TO A POINT THAT YOU
QUESTION YOUR VALUE TO
THE SOCIAL ENVIROMENT
YOU ARE IN?
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Look no further in exploring the
depths of understanding of this
matter and peer into the very
institutions that surround us and
we ourselves are part of, our own
communities.
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THE LIVING COMMUNE
the word community in its literal form is
defined by two characteristics: location and
social identification.
First, a community can be defined simply as
a group of individuals bound with specific
geographic locations. It means that the
group of people living in the specific area
can be already called a community.
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Presentation Design
THE LIVING COMMUNE
The second definition surmises that a
community is an example of a collective
that identifies common traits, goals, or
customs. It can be argued that communities
bind individuals into a collective whole.
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THE LIVING COMMUNE
A community is a living entity and goes
beyond the old categorization of space
as its primary definition. More than a
space, a community is made up of
people: you and I.
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THE LIVING COMMUNE
Much like living organisms, you may
think of people as living cells that
make up an organic being. People
within the community act in the
same way and of some importance.
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THE LIVING COMMUNE
Like cells, we need each other to
support life. Our society itself has
life, vibrancy, and every single one is
integral to support this structure as
everybody else.
12. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
When we think of a community, we
think of how people come together
to form a singular faction. We see it
it as a structure that is made up of
individuals bound with something
abstract and unforeseen. It is not
as simple as such, as the
community is bound because of
self-help.
13. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
The concept of self-help is about how
individuals seeks personal development
without the help of others. However, self-help
defines a community once each individual
wants and needs intersect, therefore
justifying a need to unify. It is assumed that
people are bound to seek self-help in their
own lives, and their journey, find common
avenues for cooperation and partnerships
among others and therefore lay the
foundations for capacity-building.
14. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
However, not everyone sees it as such due to
the varying sense of community ownership
that its members may possess. Ownership, in
this sense, is the level of commitment and
accountability that an individual has for the
community. This can be summed up by the
level of involvement the community and its
members hold in the most basic operational
structures of the commune. Some of these
structures can be governmental, and formal
or informal.
15. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
These social categorizations bind individuals
and groups towards specific goals, concerns,
and issues. Problems within communities are
shared just as resources and opportunities.
We must never forget we are all stakeholders
and are bound by the same fate of the
commune. Ownership, some may argue, is a
choice but in reality, ownership is a necessity
for the members of the community if they
aspire to improve their current situation.
16. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
Through community participation, individuals
can provide their own contributions through
acts of volunteerism in projects and other
communal initiatives. More so, participation is
not only focused on being part of an ongoing
project but an individual should also be an
active member by taking part in the managerial
and organizational development of the
community, which includes the
conceptualization, planning, operationalization,
and review of initiatives.
17. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
Existent communal models of direct
participation include town halls, focus group
discussions, forums, and through informal
channels which can include everyday affairs. An
active community is one of the most important
facets of a healthy community because it
characteriscally directs issue discourses into
tangible and structured dilemmas that can be
solved and operationalized via pragmatic and
sustainable solutions created by the combined
efforts, ideas, expertise, and experiences of the
group.
18. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
While participation is key, inclusion isone
aspect of the community that is integral in
binding the collective into a whole. As a
form of social assembly, the personalities
within a community are different and
unique. In respect to culture, race, religion,
and other identifiable social identities, one
person is unique as to the other. Such
backgrounds, histories, mores, and
customs varyb and yet should be
integrated into the local communal social
fabric. .
19. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
Moreover, inclusion echoes the need for
the community to be compromising and
tolerant of these differences . A community
should always consider not only the needs
of the majority but more critically, the
needs of the minority that are often
neglected or overlooked. This can be
solved by using more objective instruments
of inquiry and a wider view that reality
exists outside the confines of the majority.
20. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
Inclusion is all about conciliation that
reaches beyond norms of collective
understanding wherein the goal is to reach
social equity among its members.
21. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
Highlighting inclusivity are access and
equity. These two are the goals that a
commune must strive for to create a better
society. Access and equity imply the ease in
which various individuals and groups can
attain the basic necessities and resources.
They push for a just allocation of goods and
opportunities that is without discrimination
and prejudice toward people.
22. THE BASICS OF A
COMMUNITY
Significantly, they provide power and social
protection among its citizens through the
continued improvement of its structures
under political, economic, sociocultural,
technological, legal, and environmental
aspects.