Abstract
From its start, community social psychology (CSP) has been oriented to produce changes in social actors enabling them to develop their capacities, to empower them so that they are able to obtain and produce new resources and effect transformations in their environment as well as being in control of their own actions and decisions. This has led to a redefinition of power in the sense of assuming that asymmetry does not mean absolute lack of resources. As understood in Latin America, CSP configures a mode of knowledge production that could be considered as belonging to a construction and critical transformation paradigm, which assumes that society is a collective construction effected by persons who consider that their life circumstances must be transformed, and about which they have developed a critical perspective. Applying participatory action-research, psychosocial community work (PCW) merges ordinary knowledge and scientific knowledge, producing a third form of knowledge that enriches both and which, through reflexivity, engenders new transforming actions. This paper shows some of the main characteristics of PCW, and its orientation towards social and individual change, incorporating the participation of the community, and highlighting its political character. It is concluded that PCW is basically a form of political psychology, in so far as it is concerned with the public field, that it develops from social needs and conflicts and that it attacks or palliates the distorting and concealing effects of ideology, through the conscientization processes.