The Centre for Collaboration in Community Connectedness (C4)
Lead Research Organisation:
Sheffield Hallam University
Department Name: College of Social Sciences and Arts
Abstract
There is a rich landscape of community action in the UK, but learning is uneven and partial, and we lack the evidence base and infrastructure for investment in, or scale-up of, successful approaches. The Centre for Collaboration in Community Connectedness (C4) responds to this challenge. It is a hub for collaboration across disciplines, sectors and places, which is rooted in community leadership and designed to transform policy and practice. C4 involves partners in universities, communities, policy, business, and civil society who have co-created this proposal and are united in its ambitious vision to develop connected communities everywhere.
We define connected communities as those with high levels of social bonds and cohesion: where people have good relationships and a sense of pride and belonging, express trust in each other and agencies, have access to resources and opportunities to participate, and can co-operate within and between places to respond to challenges and opportunities.
If community connectedness is not strong, people are more likely to experience poverty, have lower levels of employment and skills, and higher levels of illness. In communities which are connected, these challenges are less acute, and people may be better able to mobilise local resources to respond to crises or take advantage of new opportunities (described as community resilience). C4 will learn from areas where connectedness is strong, and work with communities and decision makers to address these disparities and improve outcomes for society.
The Centre will be convened by Professors Sarah Pearson and Peter Wells, who will work with a UK-wide team of researchers and specialist community and policy partners to synthesise existing evidence, develop improved measures, and undertake new research. Core to C4 are five 'Community Catapults': place-based partnerships led by civil society organisations and engaging researchers, practitioners and policy makers to co-design and carry out research, test out innovative approaches, and build evidence to support interventions which strengthen community ties and resources.
The research draws on three conceptual framings:
Community (where people they live and their connections with neighbours)
Relationships (social interactions that have meaning to people)
Social capital (the value or resources that people get from their networks and relationships).
C4 will deliver its objectives through three interlinked workstreams:
interdisciplinary research themes: social infrastructure; natural and built environment; relationships; digital technologies; systems, institutions, and markets; and diversity and place;
implementation: community-led enquiry; 'what works' evidence; new tools, measures, and analysis; informing policy and practice in real-time;
people: embedding equity, diversity and inclusion across the programme, building capacity through development for early career researchers, and supporting policy makers and practitioners to undertake research and utilise evidence about community connectedness.
Outcomes include:
Translatable evidence and improved understanding of the factors that support community connectedness
New measures and resources to help policy makers, practitioners and funders scale-up, and invest in, successful approaches
Exemplars of innovative partnerships between researchers, communities, and policy makers to build capacity for community-led research and practice
A new wave of researchers in community connectedness.
Which bring benefits to wider society, including:
Better outcomes for communities through new models of community action to drive local responses to challenges including poverty, low levels of health and wellbeing, the climate emergency and weak social cohesion
Stronger democratic processes through new community relationships between policy-makers and communities
Improved effectiveness of policy making, investment decisions, and practice and services.
We define connected communities as those with high levels of social bonds and cohesion: where people have good relationships and a sense of pride and belonging, express trust in each other and agencies, have access to resources and opportunities to participate, and can co-operate within and between places to respond to challenges and opportunities.
If community connectedness is not strong, people are more likely to experience poverty, have lower levels of employment and skills, and higher levels of illness. In communities which are connected, these challenges are less acute, and people may be better able to mobilise local resources to respond to crises or take advantage of new opportunities (described as community resilience). C4 will learn from areas where connectedness is strong, and work with communities and decision makers to address these disparities and improve outcomes for society.
The Centre will be convened by Professors Sarah Pearson and Peter Wells, who will work with a UK-wide team of researchers and specialist community and policy partners to synthesise existing evidence, develop improved measures, and undertake new research. Core to C4 are five 'Community Catapults': place-based partnerships led by civil society organisations and engaging researchers, practitioners and policy makers to co-design and carry out research, test out innovative approaches, and build evidence to support interventions which strengthen community ties and resources.
The research draws on three conceptual framings:
Community (where people they live and their connections with neighbours)
Relationships (social interactions that have meaning to people)
Social capital (the value or resources that people get from their networks and relationships).
C4 will deliver its objectives through three interlinked workstreams:
interdisciplinary research themes: social infrastructure; natural and built environment; relationships; digital technologies; systems, institutions, and markets; and diversity and place;
implementation: community-led enquiry; 'what works' evidence; new tools, measures, and analysis; informing policy and practice in real-time;
people: embedding equity, diversity and inclusion across the programme, building capacity through development for early career researchers, and supporting policy makers and practitioners to undertake research and utilise evidence about community connectedness.
Outcomes include:
Translatable evidence and improved understanding of the factors that support community connectedness
New measures and resources to help policy makers, practitioners and funders scale-up, and invest in, successful approaches
Exemplars of innovative partnerships between researchers, communities, and policy makers to build capacity for community-led research and practice
A new wave of researchers in community connectedness.
Which bring benefits to wider society, including:
Better outcomes for communities through new models of community action to drive local responses to challenges including poverty, low levels of health and wellbeing, the climate emergency and weak social cohesion
Stronger democratic processes through new community relationships between policy-makers and communities
Improved effectiveness of policy making, investment decisions, and practice and services.
Organisations
- Sheffield Hallam University (Lead Research Organisation)
- MARKET DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION (Project Partner)
- Business in the Community (Project Partner)
- Oxford Consultants for Social Inclusion (Project Partner)
- DiverseCity Development Trust (Project Partner)
- Power to Change (Project Partner)
- Nat Assoc Voluntary & Community Action (Project Partner)
- Department for Communities NI (Project Partner)
- Min of Housing Communities and Local Gov (Project Partner)
- Equality and Human Rights Commission (Project Partner)
- Centre for Ageing Better (Project Partner)
- Local Trust (Project Partner)
- Sonnet Advisory & Impact CIC (Project Partner)
- Iswe Foundation (Project Partner)
- Volunteer Development Scotland (Project Partner)
- The Campaign to End Loneliness (Project Partner)
- GOOD THINGS FOUNDATION (Project Partner)
