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Journal ArticleDOI

Health Promotion and Empowerment: Reflections on Professional Practice

Ronald Labonté
- 01 Jun 1994 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 2, pp 253-268
TLDR
It is argued that health promotion is not a social movement but a professional and bureaucratic response to the new knowledge challenges of social movements, and has both empowering and disempowering aspects.
Abstract
Recent reformulations of health promotion focus on empowerment as both a means and an end in health promotion practice. Both concepts, however, are rarely examined for their assumptions about social change processes or the potential of community groups, professionals, and institutions to create healthier living situations. This article attends to some of these assumptions, expressing ideas generated during 6 years of professional training workshops with over 2,500 community health practitioners in Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. The article first argues that health promotion is not a social movement but a professional and bureaucratic response to the new knowledge challenges of social movements. As such, it has both empowering and disempowering aspects. The article analyzes empowerment as a dialectical relation in which power is simultaneously given and taken, and illustrates this in the context of health promotion programs. A model of an empowering professional (institutional) health promotion practice is presented, in which linkages among personal services, small group supports, community organizing, coalition advocacy, and political action are made explicit. Practice examples are provided to illustrate each level of the empowering relation, and the article concludes with a brief discussion of the model's educational and organizational utility.

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Review of community-based research: assessing partnership approaches to improve public health.

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Identifying and Defining the Dimensions of Community Capacity to Provide a Basis for Measurement

TL;DR: The dimensions that the symposium participants suggested as central to the construct, including participation and leadership, skills, resources, social and interorganizational networks, sense of community, understanding of community history, community power, community values, and critical reflection are described.

Community-based participatory research: assessing the evidence

TL;DR: The EPC paired trained abstractors with a senior reviewer, who used an analytic framework to guide development of abstraction tables, and used the same framework to rate the quality of both the primary research and primary community-based participation elements.
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Emerging Theories in Health Promotion Practice and Research

TL;DR: This work focuses on the development of a theory and application framework for community-based prevention marketing and its application to Health Promotion practice and research.
References
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Book

Helplessness: On Depression, Development, and Death

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a learned-helplessness model of depression and developed a set of guidelines for depression and learned helplessness, including depression, anxiety and unpredictability, childhood failure, sudden psychosomatic death controllability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Terms of empowerment/exemplars of prevention: toward a theory for community psychology.

TL;DR: The concept "prevention" is viewed as an exemplar, whereas the concept "empowerment" is suggested as a leading candidate for the title "phenomena of interest" to Community Psychology.
Book

Collaborating: Finding Common Ground for Multiparty Problems

TL;DR: The article presents a review of the book “Collaborating: Finding Common Ground for Multiparty Problems,” by Barbara Gray.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Praise of Paradox: A Social Policy of Empowerment over Prevention

TL;DR: The thesis of this paper is that the most important and interesting aspects of community life are by their very nature paradoxical; and that the task as researchers, scholars, and professionals should be to “unpack” and influence contemporary resolutions of paradox.
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