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The Significant Role of Youth and Community Development Work

 

Abstract

Youth and community development work has its historical roots in informal education. Values and principle are a central and integral part of youth and community development work and how we should practice. As practitioners of informal education, the work that we do is about making a difference to the lives of people and their communities. At the heart of this is the commitment to social justice and change. Central to the philosophy of youth and community development work is an understanding and commitment to anti-oppressive practice. This requires an understanding of ourselves, and locating and reflecting on our own values, within a cultural and structural context of oppression and power in society. Such an approach is embedded with a Marxist philosophy and framework. Youth and community development practitioners should have an understanding of the operation of power and inequality in society. They should be committed to anti-oppressive practice values and to tackling inequalities and injustices in society. Practitioners should act as agents of social change, seeking to empower those around them, and therefore are by their very nature, Marxist in their values and approach. This paper argues that the role of youth and community development practitioners, the work that they do, is essentially out of love for humanity. This is what Marxism and socialism offers in the twenty-first century. This is what youth and community development work has to offer today. The philosophy and analysis was relevant in the past, it is relevant today and it will continue to be relevant in the future.

Notes on Contributor

Jagdish Chouhan is a senior lecturer in the Youth and Community Division at De Montfort University, Leicester, UK. He is a programme leader for the MA Youth Work and Community Development and the MA Health and Community Development. His main areas of teaching and research interests include anti-oppressive practice, theory and practice of work with young people, theory and practice of community development, issues of health and wellbeing in youth and community development and social exclusion and disaffection. He obtained his PhD from Bradford University for his research in the area of racism and the media. He also obtained an MA with Professional Qualification in Community Education at De Montfort University.

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