Publication Date
3-2016
Description
This paper describes a developing partnership between a church-based service learning center and a university initiative to build a field station in a low-income community in the anthracite coal region of Pennsylvania. It is a case study of how secular and religious institutions have been collaborating to achieve the shared goal of improving social conditions in specific communities. The theoretical focus of the paper is on how a change from a “glass is half empty” to a “glass is half full” perception of the community opens new possibilities for change. This paper concentrates on the story of one partnership as a case study demonstrating current trends in service learning both within universities and within the Catholic Church in America. Analysis centers on the basic question of why the project had symbolic power for both partners and on the institutional processes within both organizations that helped the partnership grow. We use the framework of Assets-Based Community Development (ABCD), also known as the “strengths perspective”, to conceptualize the contrast.
Field Station
Coal Region Field Station
Journal
Religions
Volume
7
Issue
75
Department
Sociology & Anthropology
Link to Published Version
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7060075
Recommended Citation
Milofsky, C.; Green, B. Re-Building Coal Country: A Church/University Partnership. Religions 2016, 7, 75.
Included in
Civic and Community Engagement Commons, Regional Sociology Commons, Sociology of Religion Commons