Rosie R. Meade’s research while affiliated with University College Cork and other places

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Publications (1)


Government and Community Development in Ireland: The Contested Subjects of Professionalism and Expertise
  • Article

June 2012

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139 Reads

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29 Citations

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Rosie R. Meade

This paper historicises the recent and ongoing professionalisation of community development in the Republic of Ireland. The term professionalisation refers both to the designation and accreditation of a distinctive community work occupation and a wider set of processes that effect more strategic approaches to the planning, delivery and evaluation of community organisations. The paper reviews some tensions associated with professionalisation; tensions that closely relate to community work's reputation as a “bottom‐up” or “participatory” strategy. It also interrogates community development's place as a strategy of government in contemporary Ireland. In so doing it reconsiders the assumed separateness and distinctiveness of the state and community sectors, arguing that the state has been centrally implicated in calling the community sector into being. In their turn community development organisations have shaped and mediated policy delivery on the ground. It is these processes of hybridisation, co‐operation, antagonism and struggle that have given professionalisation its momentum.

Citations (1)


... The reason why the community sector continued to grow in Ireland was that it generally worked, however, these organisations allowed 59% of their funding (Meade, 2012) to come from government sources. In many smaller community development companies, the funding was 100% leaving the control and micromanagement totally in the hands of the civil service managers. ...

Reference:

Community Development in Ireland: A Reader
Government and Community Development in Ireland: The Contested Subjects of Professionalism and Expertise
  • Citing Article
  • June 2012

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