Liberation of hope: An ethnographic study of community-based initiatives in Houston, Texas
Abstract
This is an ethnographic study about the worldview of community-based initiatives in Houston, Texas, and the people who work in them. People who participated in this study recognize that their direct constructive action is at the heart of authentic social change in their minority communities. Through qualitative data analysis, a constellation of relationships and process patterns were found to constitute themselves into the system of the community-based initiative. The predominant patterns identified from the findings in this study are: the pervasiveness of place, the importance of people, unique initiatory patterns, the concrete local sustainability, the ever-present action orientation, the resourceful use of networks and inter-relationships, the significance of church influence, the core sense of spirituality and the essence of hope. These patterns emerged out of the local knowledge, which is acutely sensitive to the elements of history and lived experience, embedded in the distinctive moral and visionary patterns of meaning and expression. Findings from the research reveal that these community-based initiatives are not programs--they are people--people who keep hope alive in their communities and who, by their daily practice, liberate others.
Subject Area
Cultural anthropology|Welfare|American studies
Recommended Citation
Pegler, Jo Anne, "Liberation of hope: An ethnographic study of community-based initiatives in Houston, Texas" (1995). Texas Medical Center Dissertations (via ProQuest). AAI9610035.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dissertations/AAI9610035