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Placemaking |
Church Planting |
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Community Building |
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Sex, Economy, Freedom and
Community: Eight Essays:In eight visionary or polemical essays,
Berry (Fidelity ) sounds the themes of decentralization, renewal of
community and ecological awareness that inform his previous books.
Assailing the U.S. government's role in the Persian Gulf War, the
Kentucky poet/farmer/conservationist calls for the creation of a peace
academy and urges Americans to ``waste less, spend less, use less, want
less, need less.'' |
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Habits of the Heart:
First published in 1985, continues to be one of the most discussed
interpretations of modern American society, a quest for a democratic
community that draws on our diverse civic and religious traditions. In a
new preface the authors relate the arguments of the book both to the
current realities of American society and to the growing debate about
the country's future. With this new edition one of the most influential
books of recent times takes on a new immediacy. |
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Great Good Place:Cafes,
Coffee Shops, Bookstores, Bars, Hair Salons and Other Hangouts at the
Heart of a Community
The Great Good Place is touching more people than ever before. The
owners of Seattle's Third Place Books, which opened in 1998, were
directly inspired by this book, as are, increasingly, entrepreneurs and
planners nationwide. They are fueled by its compelling central thesis:
that "third places," where people can gather, put aside the concerns of
the work and home, and hang out simply for the pleasures of good company
and lively conversation, are the heart of a community's social vitality
and the grassroots of democracy. |
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Bowling
Alone:The Collapse and Revival of American Community
Since its peak in the mid-1960s, involvement in civic and community
organizations in the United States has been on the decline. From bridge
clubs to charity leagues to the NAACP, organizations across the country
are seeing their numbers slowly dwindle as their members age. Why is it
that, as Tom Kissell, national membership director for the Veterans of
Foreign Wars observed, "[k]ids today just aren't joiners"? In Bowling
Alone, Harvard professor Robert D. Putnam explores the changing role of
community in the life of Americans. |
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Building
Communities from the Inside Out: A Path Toward Finding And
Mobilizing a Community's Assets
This guide summarizes lessons learned by studying successful
community-building initiatives in hundreds of neighborhoods across the
U.S. It outlines what local communities can do to start their own
journies down the path of asset-based development. |
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Careless
Society: Community and Its Counterfeits
Amid all the hand-wringing about the loss of community in America these
days, here is a book that celebrates the ability of neighborhoods to
heal from within. John McKnight tells how the experts' best efforts to
rebuild and revitalize communities are in fact destroying them. McKnight
focuses on four "counterfeiting" aspects of society: professionalism,
medicine, human service systems, and the criminal justice system. |
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Placemaking |
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Experience Economy:
Pine and Gilmore posit that every business, whether on the Web or on
Main Street, USA, must treat their operation as a stage for engaging
customers like audience members. Like Pine's award-winning classic Mass
Customization, The Experience Economy takes a slash at the business
status quo and makes you think beyond your product. |
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Housing as if People
Mattered: This book is a collection of guidelines for the site
design of low-rise, high-density family housing. It is intended as a
reference tool, primarily for housing designers and planners, but also
for developers, housing authorities, citizens' groups, and tenants
organizations--anyone involved in planning or rehabilitating housing. It
provides guidelines for the layout of buildings, open spaces, community
facilities, play areas, walk ways, and the myriad components that make
up a housing site. |
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Town Planning
in Practice: An Introduction to the Art of Designing Cities and
Suburbs
First published in 1909, Raymond Unwin's Town Planning in Practice: An
Introduction to the Art of Designing Cities and Suburbs is an
extraordinary compendium of images and theories on urban design. As a
member of the generation of planners following Camillo Sitte and
preceding the emergence of the modern planners of the 1920s, Unwin
considered planning a design-based discipline rather than a purely
technical one. He believed that artistic and practical criteria were
mutually supportive and carried this out in his work by creating plans
that represented a unity of art, science, and technology. |
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A Pattern
Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction
You can use this book to design a house for yourself with your family;
you can use it to work with your neighbors to improve your town and
neighborhood; you can use it to design an office, or a workshop, or a
public building. And you can use it to guide you in the actual process
of construction. |
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Free Agent
Nation: America's Independent Workers Are Transforming the Way We
Live
The Organization Man is history. Taking his place is America’s new
economic icon: the "free agent" the job-hopping, tech-savvy,
fulfillment-seeking self-employed independent worker. Already 30 million
strong, these new "dis-organization" men and women are transforming
America in ways both profound and exhilarating. |
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The
Connecting Church
The measure of a society's health is how well it takes care of the
youngest generation. By this standard, we fail. But All Kids Are Our
Kids offers an approach to unleash the extraordinary power of community
when people unite around a widely shared vision of healthy child and
adolescent development. |
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The
Connecting Church
The development of meaningful relationships, where every member carries
a significant sense of belonging, is central to what it means to be the
church. So why do many Christians feel disappointed and disillusioned
with their efforts to experience authentic community? Despite the best
efforts of pastors, small group leaders, and faithful lay persons,
church too often is a place of loneliness rather than connection. |
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Making Room
for Life: Trading Chaotic Lifestyles for Connected Relationships
If America is sliding into a moral swamp, what's the best Christian
response? The hardball approach of the religious right? Or is there a
more productive way to engage our culture? Dean Merrill, a former vice
president with Focus on the Family, challenges us to transform
society--and our own hearts--from the inside out. Sinners in the Hands
of an Angry Church is about attitude, about living out our convictions
in a Christ-like manner instead of bullying our way into the system like
any other loud and selfish government lobby. |
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Community 101
Authentic community is essential if the church is to remain true to its
God-assigned mission. As the title indicates, the interrelated concepts
of community and oneness are presented in this book. Gilbert Bilezikian
lays a biblical foundation for this call to community by showing the
centrality of community in the sweep of salvation history -- its loss in
the Fall, its reclamation through Christ, and its ultimate realization
in the New Jerusalem. |
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Creating
Community: 5 Keys to Building a Small Group Culture
In Creating Community, Andy Stanley and Bill Willits take you on their
amazing journey of developing the small group culture at North Point
Community Church. They reveal their five key discoveries about what it
takes to create a compelling small group ministry. These discoveries
have helped connect almost 8,000 people into North Point's adult small
groups. This is not just another book about community; this is a book
about strategy - strategy that builds a small group culture. |
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Renewing the
City: Reflections on Community Development and Urban Renewal
Community developer and urban activist Robert Lupton looks to the Old
Testament example of Nehemiah as a role model for community
transformation and renewal. Lupton sees the book of Nehemiah as the
memoirs of an urban developer who transformed a decaying city into a
place of security and vitality. |
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