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Theresa Healy <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 31 May 2006 07:35:42 -0700
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I don't know how many of you have read : Mandy Bonisteel and Linda Green
IMPLICATIONS OF THE SHRINKING SPACE FOR FEMINIST ANTI-VIOLENCE ADVOCACY
Presented at the 2005 Canadian Social Welfare Policy Conference, Forging
Social Futures, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada - it is about the
Advocacy chill that has been imposed on community organizations (in this
case anti violence feminist organizations. It is worth reading. Onbce
again, a holistic approach, that integrates service and political
action, is squashed. To quote:
"This discussion of the implications of the shrinking space for feminist
anti-violence advocacy and feminist civil society ties together
observations about the restrictive interpretation of charitable
activities, severe cuts to health and social programs, the blurring of
public and private funding strategies, and the conversion of social
perception about the value of civil versus corporate influence on
governance. These factors, all imprints of corporatization, have
combined to produce conditions in which feminists and feminist
organizations in Canada have been deterred from their important role in
advancing structural social change."

Theresa Healy, Ph.D.
Adjunct Professor
Dept. of Gender Studies and the School of Environmental Planning
UNBC, Prince George, BC. V2N 4Z9
email: [log in to unmask]; cell phone: 250-565-1955

"Until lions have their own historian, tales of the hunt will always
reflect the hunter." African proverb.


-----Original Message-----
From: Social Determinants of Health [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Chrystal Ocean
Sent: Tuesday, May 30, 2006 6:56 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [SDOH] Brokering community knowledge to universities

Hello everyone.

I'm not sure that the previous discussion - "brokering university
knowledge
to community agencies" - adequately portrayed the view of people who
work in
community at the grassroots. 

I felt shut down in that discussion, perhaps because I was understood to
be
speaking for myself alone, or I expressed the frustration of every one
of
the community workers I've met, or because my use of 'community' was
misunderstood (I'll clear that up in a bit). Heartening for me was that
the
discussion generated private correspondence from subscribers who wanted
to
convey their support, but were reluctant to post themselves due to the
risk.
They shared their thoughts, some of which I used with their permission
in
subsequent posts. There have been lurkers, too, accessing this topic
from
the SDOH website archives. These people are from a number of community
organizations whom I alerted to the discussion, and they told their
friends.
Aside from the comments on the topic, the overall message has been:
Don't
give up. So I won't.

By 'community group', I mean a nonprofit, charity, coalition,
association,
or ad hoc group of people, whose origin was inspired from within a given
town, village, neighbourhood, as opposed to organizations that are
'based'
in communities, but were inspired and continue to be largely mandated by
government. An example of the latter group are the Community Futures
Development Corporations. Most of the current CFDCs were approved by the
Minister of Employment and Immigration between 1986 and 1990. Our local
CFDC
receives 65% of its funding (core funding, no less) from Western
Economic
Diversification and grabs a sizeable share of the rest from HRSDC.
Community
groups must compete for scarce government project - never core - funding
against agencies such as this, organizations which advertise themselves
as
'volunteer-led' - the board is volunteer and comprised of business
people -
and 'community-based'. In fact, these organizations are directed from
the
top-down and do not risk expiry due to lack of money.

I thought it may help further understanding if the original topic was
turned
around. So I titled this new thread "Brokering community knowledge to
universities," partly to highlight the inequality of U-C alliances and
also
for another reason.

When you read that title, does it make sense to you? I ask because when
I
query my community friends, the reaction is "Huh?!" 

Think about the things community groups deal with directly on a regular
basis: violence against women, disability, childhood abuse, addictions,
mental illness, homelessness, hunger, seniors isolation, caregivers
without
support, suicide, preventable disease, terminal illness... Where in all
this
would arise the goal of brokering our knowledge to universities? What
would
be the point, from our perspective? We have very limited human,
financial
and other resources, which the funding climate makes worse. What we have
is
spent on the things we do everyday. There is no room for anything else.

Alas, it all comes back to funding. In addition to everything that we do
each day, we worry about how we'll pay the rent, pay staff, buy stamps,
get
around, communicate... Charitable foundations can give grants only to
other
registered charities. Many groups are not registered charities or even
registered nonprofits. Registered non-profits - and in rare cases,
associations, coalitions and ad hoc groups - can apply for government
funding. However, government funding is evermore scare and finely
streamed. 

Enter programs like CIHR and CURA (Canadian Institute for Health
Research
and Canadian-University Research Alliances, respectively). 

If the only way to get funding is for community groups to align
themselves
to a university, then some of us will consider that. In rare cases, such
alliances have become as much partnerships as the program allows. Most
of
the time, however, the community giveth, the university taketh, and
there is
an exchange of money. What does that sound like to you?

Our argument isn't so much against individual academics - well, some
deserve
a tongue lashing -, but against the government and universities when
they
work in collusion with government. Not only has government tightened its
own
purse strings and excessively streamed what's left, but through its laws
governing charities it is slowly snuffing community groups out of
existence.
That may be its plan, for now there's a new thing they're selling - the
conversion of nonprofits into 'social enterprises' or the
corporatization of
the non-profit sector.

What we community groups would like to see is an attempt by academics to
understand our situation, maybe even to advocate with us, e.g., to
change
the Charity Act. There are a few of you out there and you are precious
to us
indeed.

Ocean

---------------------------------
Chrystal Ocean, WISE Coordinator
http://www.wise-bc.org/

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