Human Ecology and Community Robert
J. Gregory
( 2003 • Pages: 112 • Size: 180x240 • ISBN 81-85264-32-5 • Binding: Hard • Price:
US$ 55/- Rs.
750/- (Human Ecology Special
Issue No. 11) Those who work with ecological perspectives often choose and
use human communities as convenient locales for both research and
practice. Too, individuals and groupings within a community do
communicate and relate with each other in bounded or circumscribed contexts,
thus interlock together and influence each other as well as their surrounding
physical and political environment. In addition, communities are
purposeful in that people do follow various values and beliefs, thereby
displaying still another of the many properties of system-ness. Community psychologists, like applied anthropologists, some
public health workers, political scientists, and sociologists, have found
that the sub-groupings within a community are definable, observable, and
related to each other and to the larger power structures of a particular
community. As such, these groupings are inherently intriguing as
integral parts of the human condition. Palmerston North represents one such “typical”
community in CONTENTS Foreword List of Contributors 0 1. Introduction: Human Ecology and Community - Robert J. Gregory
(New
02. Palmerston
North and the Manawatu: A historical approach - Peter Arends ( 03. 04. High School, Music - 05. Linking Education with Business - Kate Brophy ( 06. Business enterprise: The engine of growth - Ninya Maubach ( 07. Military Camp - Mary Ann Gregory ( 08. A Gang - Joanna Morris ( 09. Drug Scene - Jonathan Aitken ( 10. Mental Health - Stephanie White ( 11. Kowhai: A Rest Home - Melanie Holdaway ( 12. Hinengaro - Deanna Hollis ( 13. Epilogue - Robert J.
Gregory ( Index
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