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This book explores mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion involved
in practices of community building through an ethnographic study of
a neighborhood restaurant in Amsterdam. It presents important
insights into the advantages and empowering effects of
professional, top down community building in a disadvantaged
neighborhood, as well as its tensions and contradictory outcomes.
The core argument of the study is that, in spite of the abserved
restaurant's well-intended and well-organized attempts to create an
inclusive and heterogeneous local community, it instead established
one both exclusive and homogeneous. Through a set of community
building practices and discourses of "deprivation" and "ethnic and
racial otherness," the construction of collective fear for ethnic
and racial "others" was indirectly facilitated among the white,
working class visitors. As a result, insurmountable barriers were
erected for non-white and non-native Dutch residents to become part
of the local community. This project speaks to social scientists as
well as social workers, governments, and policy-makers concerned
with issues of social cohesion, informal networks, and professional
community building in disadvantaged urban settings.
This book explores mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion involved
in practices of community building through an ethnographic study of
a neighborhood restaurant in Amsterdam. It presents important
insights into the advantages and empowering effects of
professional, top down community building in a disadvantaged
neighborhood, as well as its tensions and contradictory outcomes.
The core argument of the study is that, in spite of the abserved
restaurant's well-intended and well-organized attempts to create an
inclusive and heterogeneous local community, it instead established
one both exclusive and homogeneous. Through a set of community
building practices and discourses of "deprivation" and "ethnic and
racial otherness," the construction of collective fear for ethnic
and racial "others" was indirectly facilitated among the white,
working class visitors. As a result, insurmountable barriers were
erected for non-white and non-native Dutch residents to become part
of the local community. This project speaks to social scientists as
well as social workers, governments, and policy-makers concerned
with issues of social cohesion, informal networks, and professional
community building in disadvantaged urban settings.
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