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The Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD) Institute is extending its
growing influence to the healthcare, religious, and philanthropic communities. A new and independent ABCD Religious Network was formed in the wake of
a retreat last summer in which church leaders from six denominations were
schooled in ABCD methods by Institute co-directors John McKnight
and John Kretzmann. The network provides information and technical
assistance to both urban and rural congregations and also publishes a
newsletter. The Institute is now working with other religious leaders
to see how church judicatories can support congregations in community-building
activities. ABCD is also developing a network of some 20 hospitals and health systems
interested in the asset-based approach to community development. In one
initiative, representatives from each hospital are working with ABCD to
create inventories of hospital resources that can be used to support local
community activities and enterprises. Encouraged by its growing support from the philanthropic community, the
Institute is in the process of creating a network of foundations that
support asset-based community development projects. Taking networking a step further, McKnight and Kretzmann are now organizing
geographical networks of practitioners in Chicago, California, Colorado,
Wisconsin, and South Carolina who have been using the ABCD research in
their work. They represent a variety of sectors that include universities,
government, and business. ABCD hopes these networks will develop policies
and proposals for future action. The Institute has increased its national faculty to 29 members who run training sessions in ABCD methods for community groups and other organizations throughout North America. To assist in the training, ABCD recently published three new workbooks and an IPR report (see p. 6), and has five more guides in the works. New workbooks. A Guide to Creating a Neighborhood Information
Exchange: Building Communities by Connecting Local Skills and Knowledge
describes a simple, inexpensive capacity-listing-and-referral service
to discover untapped local resources that can be shared by community members.
A Guide to Evaluating Asset-Based Community Development: Lessons, Challenges, and Opportunities, by Thomas Dewar, offers ten principles for implementing approprate and successful evaluation strategies. |