Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association

<p> This research was undertaken to understand how an organically arisen, neighborhood driven initiative operated. Research attempted to understand what such an initiative could accomplish and change in their neighborhood. This study also attempted to discern longitudinal effects which the org...

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Main Author: Villagomez-Christensen, Mario
Language:EN
Published: University of Colorado Colorado Springs 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10788271
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-107882712018-05-17T16:04:44Z Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association Villagomez-Christensen, Mario Public administration <p> This research was undertaken to understand how an organically arisen, neighborhood driven initiative operated. Research attempted to understand what such an initiative could accomplish and change in their neighborhood. This study also attempted to discern longitudinal effects which the organization may have had throughout the neighborhood where they operated. This study attempted to delineate these objectives through researching the Hillside Neighborhood Association, located in the Hillside neighborhood of Colorado Springs, Colorado. The methodology for this case study, was a sequential mixed methods model. Which began with a quantitative phase, that utilized both statistical analysis and data triangulation, to deduce what the organization achieved as indicated through utilized data. The qualitative phase of this case study employed a purposeful sample, participants were contacted by the researcher separately and then interviewed. Participants had to have reside in the neighborhood for at minimum to years from data of contact. Neighborhood longevity ensured that participants would have the most knowledge about the organization and potentially accompanying neighborhood changes. Findings indicated that neighborhood participants held steadfast to past neighborhood achievements which the HNA was conduit for. This long-term neighborhood pride among older residents was salient to them. Additionally, past success appeared to have laid a foundation for future improvement efforts to capitalize on. The social capital of participants highlighted a need to focus on a small-scale street level point of entry for neighborhood improvement endeavors.</p><p> University of Colorado Colorado Springs 2018-05-16 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10788271 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Public administration
spellingShingle Public administration
Villagomez-Christensen, Mario
Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association
description <p> This research was undertaken to understand how an organically arisen, neighborhood driven initiative operated. Research attempted to understand what such an initiative could accomplish and change in their neighborhood. This study also attempted to discern longitudinal effects which the organization may have had throughout the neighborhood where they operated. This study attempted to delineate these objectives through researching the Hillside Neighborhood Association, located in the Hillside neighborhood of Colorado Springs, Colorado. The methodology for this case study, was a sequential mixed methods model. Which began with a quantitative phase, that utilized both statistical analysis and data triangulation, to deduce what the organization achieved as indicated through utilized data. The qualitative phase of this case study employed a purposeful sample, participants were contacted by the researcher separately and then interviewed. Participants had to have reside in the neighborhood for at minimum to years from data of contact. Neighborhood longevity ensured that participants would have the most knowledge about the organization and potentially accompanying neighborhood changes. Findings indicated that neighborhood participants held steadfast to past neighborhood achievements which the HNA was conduit for. This long-term neighborhood pride among older residents was salient to them. Additionally, past success appeared to have laid a foundation for future improvement efforts to capitalize on. The social capital of participants highlighted a need to focus on a small-scale street level point of entry for neighborhood improvement endeavors.</p><p>
author Villagomez-Christensen, Mario
author_facet Villagomez-Christensen, Mario
author_sort Villagomez-Christensen, Mario
title Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association
title_short Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association
title_full Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association
title_fullStr Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association
title_full_unstemmed Community Driven Improvement| A Case Study of the Hillside Neighborhood Association
title_sort community driven improvement| a case study of the hillside neighborhood association
publisher University of Colorado Colorado Springs
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10788271
work_keys_str_mv AT villagomezchristensenmario communitydrivenimprovementacasestudyofthehillsideneighborhoodassociation
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