February 2002 - Ref 242
A new approach to assessing community strengths
Work in inner city Bradford piloted a practical approach to
assessing the capacity of communities to take lead roles in
regeneration and local action. The 'community strengths assessment'
approach focuses particularly on local community and voluntary groups.
It looks at how they are organised, their aims and needs, existing
support and what support they might need in future. The approach
involves comprehensive local surveys which provide detailed
information leading to recommendations for action. Independent
consultants assisted staff from Bradford Council in developing the
approach. Its key features are:
- Community strengths assessments focus on community and voluntary
groups not individuals. Whilst individuals have a part to play, this
approach sees effective community involvement and leadership as being
built primarily through the collective activity of local community and
voluntary groups.

- The assessment contains two main elements - level of community
organisation and level of support. In combination, these help build a
comprehensive and detailed picture of community capacity, and
highlight gaps in both activity and infrastructure that can be acted
on through new initiatives and planning.

- The approach provides a framework for planning capacity building.
It incorporates a highly participative style of working, involving and
working with local groups rather than imposing a plan drawn up by
outside agencies.

- The approach focuses on what communities have to offer and
contribute to the renewal process rather than just on problems and the
indicators of deprivation. It values groups' skills and talents and
specifically asks about achievements.

- Community strengths assessments can be useful for:
- planning support for community groups and community enterprises,
such as training, advice, funding and practical resources;
- providing a baseline description for programmes concerned with
joint working and community involvement;
- establishing local neighbourhood and community-based projects.
- In addition to informing regeneration programmes and neighbourhood
renewal, the approach can also be used with communities of interest
and identity across a whole district or borough, such as disabled
people's groups. Community strengths assessments can feed into local
community planning, district-wide strategies and Local Strategic
Partnerships.

Background
The 'community strengths assessment' approach was developed by
Bradford Council and COGS, a community development consultancy,
working jointly with many local projects and groups in Bradford. The
research work to devise the new approach focused on Bradford's inner
city New Deal for Communities area, as well as involving two other
neighbourhoods. In the New Deal for Communities area it involved
asking twenty-five grassroots community groups about their needs,
problems, resources and hopes for the future.
The survey painted a detailed picture of the level of community
organisation, showing an area with many active and committed groups.
However, these were often experiencing isolation and a lack of access
to training, advice and secure funding. Organisations based or working
in the area providing support to community groups were also surveyed.
It showed that a wide range of help was available but crucially not
being accessed enough by local groups.
The findings were reviewed and main conclusions agreed at an open
meeting involving over forty local groups and voluntary organisations,
as well as agencies and Bradford Council. Using the 'community
strengths framework' outlined below, groups decided their area was at
'Level Two' and went on to make specific recommendations for
developing the levels of support and community organisation to a
higher level.
What community strengths assessments involve
This is a highly participative approach - the rationale behind the
approach means that the community strengths assessment would only ever
be carried out with the explicit backing of local groups. This
involves consultation through local networks and forums of grassroots
groups.
The process developed in Bradford includes the following stages and
elements:
- A survey of community and voluntary
groups. This asks about: how
groups are organised, their memberships, aims, plans, what training
and advice they receive, funding and resources, equal opportunities
issues, links with partnerships and networks. This builds up a picture
of the level of community organisation in the area. In order to do
this, a comprehensive list of local groups was developed through
extensive outreach work. All groups on the list were then invited to
be surveyed, either through personal visit or through postal
questionnaire.
- A survey of organisations providing
support. This asks about
resources, funding, training, information, advice, facilities,
equipment and so on that organisations such as Primary Care Trusts,
council departments and larger voluntary agencies provide to local
community and voluntary groups. This builds up a picture of the level
of support in the area. Again, through outreach work, a list was
developed of all known 'support organisations' based in or working
in the area. All such organisations were then sent a questionnaire
through the post.
- Analysis. The information gathered from the two surveys is
analysed and draft findings identified. The findings from the two
surveys are combined to identify the key gaps in the area's level of
community organisation and level of support.
- Consultation. Groups and agencies are invited to participate in
workshops and open meetings to discuss the draft findings. The
assessment approach includes a 'community strengths framework' to
help inform recommendations for future action. This provides five
levels of community organisation to help groups identify their
existing level of community capacity and what further support is
needed. At one extreme, in Level One would be an area with groups low
on confidence, skills and links, few groups with paid staff and little
active involvement in training or equal opportunities initiatives. In
contrast, Level Five would show a well-developed community sector,
securely funded with practical support organised in relation to local
needs. The aim of having five levels is to provide flexibility in
describing an area and to encourage creative thinking to move up
between levels.
- Plans for action are drawn up, involving local agencies, the
local authority and partnerships. Recommendations agreed locally can
feed into an action plan for the area; if needed, progress can be
reviewed.
In some areas, communities may be poorly organised and need basic
community development support to help get things moving. Other areas
may already have many well-established community groups and voluntary
organisations, but need more specialist help so that people can be
more involved in running local projects and in managing regeneration
initiatives.
In the pilot study, the community strengths assessment was given
backing from the community representatives involved in the New Deal
for Communities Board. The work was co-ordinated by staff from
Bradford Council's Community Development Policy Unit, working jointly
with COGS. The outreach and survey work was carried out by a locally
based community project. The final report was approved by the New Deal
for Communities sub-group on community, youth and education and is
used to assist planning new initiatives in the area.
The main features of this approach
Compared to many community profiles, the method developed for
assessing community strengths contains a number of innovative
features:
- Community strengths assessments are mainly about community and
voluntary groups, and not particularly about individuals.
Community strengths profiles are primarily about the collective
activities of community and voluntary groups. The needs, skills and
role of individuals will obviously contribute to the community
development and regeneration initiatives in the area. The focus in
this approach, however, is on the needs and potential role of
community groups and organisations, with individuals' needs addressed
within this context. In other words, in community strengths
assessments, building effective community involvement and leadership
is seen as being primarily identified through the collective activity
of local community and voluntary groups.
- The assessment contains two main elements - level of community
organisation and level of support.
The approach includes both these elements to establish a clear
baseline of community capacity. An area may have a reasonable degree
of community organisation but lack effective support for it to develop
further. Equally the surveys may reveal a low level of community
organisation despite an apparently high level of support, which would
indicate the support infrastructure is not addressing local needs
effectively. The community strengths framework can be used to
establish a broad assessment of the levels of strength different areas
are at, in terms of these two key elements. In combination, these two
elements will help to build a comprehensive and detailed picture of
community capacity, and highlight gaps in both activity and
infrastructure that can be acted on through new initiatives and
planning.
- The framework provides a model for planning capacity building.
The community strengths assessment provides a straightforward way
to identify the level of community capacity and practical ideas on how
to move between levels. Groups can be involved in planning how their
area could be better organised and better supported. Due to the highly
participative style of working, it ensures this happens in a
'bottom-up' manner, involving and working with local groups rather
than imposing a plan drawn up by outside agencies.
- A positive approach.
The approach also emphasises the strengths of communities - often
the picture painted of neighbourhoods focuses exclusively on problems
and indicators of deprivation rather than what communities have to
offer and contribute to the renewal process. The surveys highlight
what is already there in terms of local community organisations and
what the potential is for the way forward. It values the skills and
talents groups have and specifically asks about achievements.
Using community strengths assessments
Regeneration
Much is talked about community involvement in both neighbourhood
renewal and European funded programmes and about the need to build the
capacity of communities for them to fully participate. In order to
provide proper support for this process, a clearly defined
starting-point or baseline description is needed. The community
strengths assessment can provide this baseline picture in considerable
detail.
Tackling social exclusion
Community strengths assessments could provide an important tool for
communities to describe their own area and, along with other
information, present their own case for action and new developments.
The survey work can help to identify excluded groups in
neighbourhoods and ask them about their needs. The approach
specifically involves outreach work to ensure marginalised groups are
consulted and involved. Community strengths assessments can also be
carried out with specific groups across a whole district or borough
rather than in just one neighbourhood. This may, for example, assess
the position of disabled people's groups or groups from a particular
minority ethnic community where people live across a larger
geographical area.
Community planning
Part One of the Local Government Act 2000 placed local authorities
under a duty to prepare a community strategy for promoting the social,
environmental and economic well-being of their areas. Community
strategies aim to identify local actions that will improve the quality
of life for all sections of the community, based on a long-term
vision. Local Strategic Partnerships will need to be pro-active in
ensuring communities are involved in the planning process and that the
capacity for effective involvement and partnership working is
assessed. To achieve lasting impact, this will need to be based on the
reality of the baseline starting point for communities in each
district.
Improved joint working
In order to tackle inequalities and improve services, local
authorities and other public agencies increasingly want to work
jointly with local communities. For local authorities, initiatives
such as Best Value, Modernising Local Government and Local Agenda 21
all call for increased consultation and involvement. Equally, many
health service organisations are looking to the voluntary and
community sector to work jointly with them in achieving nationally set
targets concerning health inequalities. Many funding bodies will want
to know what the potential is for joint working and how geared up
local community groups are to take on new projects and initiatives.
Community strengths assessments can help to identify the starting
point for effective joint working.
Conclusion
The key feature of the approach is that such assessments can
provide a systematic description of the baseline of community
capacity, by focusing on the needs and strengths of community and
voluntary groups. Such information is crucial for communities to get
involved effectively in projects, partnerships and local initiatives.
Finding out about the level of community strengths will be useful
in any area, not just those areas involved in regeneration programmes
and neighbourhood renewal. Community strengths assessments can also be
carried out with interest- and identity-based groups across a whole
district or borough, such as disabled people's groups. This will be
useful for local community planning or for informing the development
of district-wide strategies and Local Strategic Partnerships.
About the project
The three pilots were carried out in different parts of Bradford in
2000. These were Horton Grange, Allerton and Lower Grange and the New
Deal for Communities area. In particular, the experience gained from
the work carried out in the New Deal for Communities area informed the
development of the method. An early version of the community groups
survey questionnaire was first designed by the Community Development
Foundation for use in the Sandwell District, West Midlands and
combined with a household survey. The community strengths framework
has been developed from an original model developed by COGS for South
Yorkshire Objective One (Priority Four) Partnership. All these
different sources have contributed to the creation of this new
approach. The work was co-ordinated by Steve Skinner, Policy Officer
for Community Development in Bradford Council, and Mandy Wilson from
COGS.
How to get further
information
A handbook arising from the project
describes, in clearly laid out steps, how to carry out a community
strengths assessment. It is published by the Community Development
Foundation Assessing community strengths: A practical handbook for
planning capacity building, by Steve Skinner and Mandy Wilson, is
available from the Community Development Foundation, 60 Highbury Road,
London N5 2AG, Tel 020 7226 5375 (price £17.95 plus £1.80 p&p,
ISBN 1 901974 31 6).
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