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  • Center for

    Community Studies

    2010 Annual Report

  • 2

    Table of Contents

    Letter from the Director 3

    SECTION ONE

    Center Overview 4

    Center Structure 5

    Center Highlights 6-7

    Small Grant Spotlight 8-11

    New Programs 12-15

    Center-Sponsored Events 16-27

    SECTION TWO

    Active Research Projects of Affiliated Members 28-39

    Center for Community Studies College of Education and Human Development

    Vanderbilt Peabody College

    Vanderbilt University

    Susan Saegert, Director

    Mayborn 106D

    [email protected]

    615-343-6176

    Jill Robinson, Assistant Director

    [email protected]

    Cover Photos Courtesy of Jennifer Mokos and Jill Robinson

  • 3

    Dear Friends and Colleagues:

    The Center for Community Studies has had a year of growth while continuing to strive to find

    ways to increase the quality of community life through research, program development and

    partnerships with many different sectors. More, and more diverse, people attended our

    functions (colloquia and conferences) than the previous year. Our collaborations with

    community and governmental agencies expanded and bore fruit. For example, the Center

    worked with a local non-profit housing agency (The Housing Fund) and the Metro Development

    and Housing Authority to secure NSPII funds totaling $31 million dollars (see page 7). The

    Center also supported affiliated faculty member Craig Anne Heflinger and student member

    Marielle Lovecchio who collaborated with the Tennessee Health Care Campaign/ Tennessee

    Small Business Coalition to survey small business owners about their opinions and experiences

    with health care coverage (see page 6).

    All of these efforts contribute to the goals of facilitating ongoing conversations, idea sharing and

    collaboration around solving problems that communities face in these challenging times. In this

    annual report, you will read about our new efforts to achieve these goals. They include the

    initiation of a Community Matching Program, as well as our endeavor to facilitate the

    development of a database to bring together different community statistics that would be widely

    useful in analyzing community problems and policy impacts.

    This report serves as another opportunity to expand the conversation, reach out to new

    potential partners, report on our activities and spotlight the interesting work in which our

    members are engaged. This report is divided into two sections. The first section describes CCS

    achievements and new programs. The second section highlights the projects of our affiliated

    members. Thank you for your continued support of the Center.

    Sincerely yours,

    Susan Saegert, Ph.D.

    Director, Center for Community Studies

    Professor, Graduate Program in Community Research and Action

  • 4

    Center Overview

    We continue to build upon the foundation laid from 1966-1981 by the director of

    the original Center for Community Studies, Professor Emeritus Bob

    Newbrough, and by the work of Associate Professor Doug Perkins, who revived

    the interdisciplinary collaboration in 2004 and served as director until 2008.

    Mission Statement:

    To conduct research that will enlarge the body of scholarly

    knowledge and inform workable social policies and initiatives;

    To educate and mentor the next generation of community research

    and action scholars;

    To work as partners with community agencies and groups that are

    trying to meet the everyday challenges affecting people and the

    places they live.

    Our Mission is Carried Out Through:

    Grant-funded and other research, often collaborative and

    sometimes involving class and student projects

    Colloquia, conferences and other types of information-

    dissemination and convening activities;

    Project collaboration both internally among Center members and

    externally with our many community-partner agencies and

    organizations.

  • 5

    Center Structure

    Susan Saegert, Professor of Human and Organizational Development, is the Centers

    director. Other than providing her professional guidance in all areas of the Centers work,

    she contributes her expertise in community organizing and empowerment efforts to local

    community organizations. Furthermore, she functions as a convener for faculty, students

    and community-partners by identifying how their independent goals can coalesce.

    Jill Robinson, doctoral candidate in the Community Research and Action program, is our

    assistant director. She provides support on research projects, meeting organization and

    community-partner relationships. She is also in charge of the day to day organization of the

    Community Matching Program and inquiries from organizations wishing to work with CCS

    student or faculty members.

    Research Groups

    Input from faculty and student members has informed the

    restructuring this year of the Center with the goal of developing

    and formalizing ways to expand support for both Center

    members and community partners. To this end, a system for

    initiating research groups and interest groups has been

    developed. . Research groups involve a more substantial

    investments of time by members and can receive support from

    CCS in seeking funds and carrying out programs or projects.

    Currently research groups are Community Health;

    International Community Studies; Schools, Community and

    Youth (SCY); Urban Neighborhoods.

    International

    Community

    Studies

    Community

    Health

    Urban

    Neighborhoods

    Schools,

    Community and

    Youth

  • 6

    Center Highlights

    The three projects described here each indicate, in their unique way, the talents

    and accomplishments of our affiliated faculty and students as well as the capacity

    the Center has to convene various entities in order to achieve important goals.

    All of these successes were the product of collaborations, which is a key function

    of the Center.

    Tennessees Small Businesses and Factors Influencing Health Insurance

    Coverage Craig Anne Heflinger, Mareielle Lovecchio, Jill Robinson, and Lori Smith (Tennessee Health Care

    Campaign/Tennessee Small Business Coalition)

    The TN Health Care Campaign (THCC)/TN Small Business Coalition (TSBC) was active in

    advocating for health care reform over the past few years. In order to support their efforts and

    gather data about the issue, they collaborated with CCS affiliated members to distribute a survey to

    small businesses across the state. They found that these small businesses were struggling to

    provide health care coverage for their employees, mainly because of cost increases. Nine in ten of

    the respondents indicated an increase in cost over just one year. The study received wide press

    coverage in The Tennessean and other local media outlets. To read the full report, visit the CCS

    website. This study energized the coalitions continuing efforts to advocate for health care reform

    on behalf of small business owners.

    Funding: Consumer Voices for Coverage; The Small Business Majority

    Participatory Action Research Event Our October Participatory Action Research (PAR) consultation brought together national experts on

    PAR with representatives from Nashvilles various faith communities to explore how university-

    based researchers work with faith-based initiatives which tackle various community problems. To

    open the event, Reverend Bill Barnes, pastor emeritus of Edgehill United Methodist Church and

    noted community organizer, reflected on some of the history of interfaith cooperation in Nashville.

    Several CCS-affiliated faculty members convened groups from Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and

    interfaith groups to discuss their history, their current activities, and the ways in which they

    interact with Vanderbilt faculty and students. We heard presentations concerning faith-based social

    service provision, community organizing, and interfaith dialogue. Following these presentations,

    there was a roundtable discussion about the role of the academy in faith-based work in community

    settings. Representatives from CCS described some of their work and the ways in which they may

    be able to work with community organizations. Finally, Michelle Fine, Maria Torre, and Reverend

    Donnie Cook from the Institute for Participatory Action Research and Design reflected on some of

    the lessons they have learned over the course of numerous PAR-oriented projects and led discussion

    on how those lessons might apply to existing potential partnerships between CCS and faith-based

    partners in Nashville.

    Funding: The Ford Foundation

    The following CCS-affiliated faculty/community members convened topical interest groups.

    Doug Perkins: Interfaith dialogue and community-building post-9/11 (Scarritt-Bennett Center,

    the Interfaith Alliance of Middle Tennessee, and the Islamic Center of Nashville)

    Sandra Barnes: Connecting Faith and Praxis for Community Action (Spruce Street Baptist

    Church)

    Terrie Spetalnick and Angela Cowser: TNT and POGO: Community Organizing and Identity

    (People of God (POGO) and Tying Nashville Together (TNT))

    Becca Stephens and Susan Saegert: Recovery and Community (Magdalene House)

  • 7

    Nashville Shared Equity Initiative Susan Saegert, Principal Investigator: Emily Thaden and Andrew Greer

    This was a big year for the Nashville Shared Equity Initiative and the research team. Andrew Greer

    took a leading role in preparing the data for the problem analysis and estimated program impact for

    Nashvilles Neighborhood Stabilization Program 2 grant proposal. It was submitted by a consortium

    of housing agencies including Nashvilles Metropolitan Development and Housing Authority with the

    Housing Fund, Woodbine Community Organization, Urban Housing Solutions, and Pinnacle Bank

    and won $30.5 million in a very competitive national process. The programs goal is to stabilize

    housing markets and community life in neighborhoods with high foreclosure and high vacancy rates.

    Below, a map of foreclosures in Davidson County highlights the 17 census tracts that the Nashville

    consortium is targeting for housing interventions. In addition to a variety of rental and

    homeownership initiatives, the NSP2 plan includes starting up a shared equity sector of at least 100

    homes within the next 3 years. Emily Thaden was hired to help develop the shared equity portion of

    the project. Andrew Greer was hired to collect and analyze baseline data for an ongoing evaluation of

    the NSP2. New PhD students and urban planner, Donald Anthony, has joined him in this work

    during the summer 2010.

    HUD risk-scores are based on projected foreclosure and vacancy data, with scores

    ranging from 0-20. HUD requires the overall average of census-tract scores to be 18 in

    order to provide NSP2 funds.

    At the Urban Affairs Association annual conference, the team presented an analysis of data from

    focus groups with potential residents of shared equity indicating a high degree of interest in the

    scheme, as well as suggesting that low income residents were seeking to achieve many non-economic

    values in buying a home that might better be achieved through shared equity than market

    homeownership. A second presentation analyzed clusters of foreclosures with different loan and

    population characteristics and then described the different types of residents, their different forms of

    attachment or alienation from their homes, and policy implications. These presentations are under

    revision for publication. In addition, a review is being written of the consequences of homeownership

    for low and moderate income residents in light of the foreclosure crisis. Finally, the team is

    conducting an ongoing ethnographic study of the development of the shared equity sector in Nashville

    and of the NSP2 project. Saegert has also extended earlier research on the foreclosure crisis to an

    analysis of how among African Americans, the crisis represents another in a long series of

    displacements from homes and extraction of assets. This paper is to appear in a special issue of

    Journal of Urban Health on Serial Displacement.

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    NSP2

    !( 2009 foreclosures

    HUD score

  • 8

    Small Grant Spotlight

    In the past, the Center received funding to distribute small grants to our affiliated

    members. Unfortunately, because of financial cutbacks, we are not able to continue this

    program, but some of the projects still continue. The following pages provide an

    overview of three projects funded fully or in-part by CCS small grants.

    The Tied Together Parenting Initiative at the Martha OBryan Center

    Kimberly Bess, Principal Investigator; Bernadette Doykos*, Laura Vilines, Jessica Thompson, and

    Robin Daniels.

    The Tied Together parenting initiative began as part of a broader multi-year effort at the Martha

    OBryan Center under the leadership of CEO Marsha Edwards to expand the centers work beyond a

    traditional service provision model by focusing on the development of new programs and practices

    grounded in the goals of prevention, community participation and empowerment, and community

    condition change. Launched in 2008, Tied Together has served as the cornerstone of these efforts

    and provides the foundation for realizing the following key community-identified priorities: 1) Young

    children are ready for school; 2) Children are succeeding in school; Youth are ready to become

    productive adults; 4) Children and families are safe; and 5) Children and families are healthy.

    The center provides the following description of the programs content and aims:

    Our Tied Together parenting initiative gives at-risk parents from the Cayce Homes and

    surrounding east Nashville the education, resources, and modeling they need to raise healthy

    families. The program, which teaches positive parenting skills and supports good health

    outcomes among mothers, works to reduce infant mortality. Tied Together helps parents

    learn how to become their children's best teachers through gaining an understanding of child

    development. The nine-week curriculum is divided into topics that include Forming a

    Community of Learners, Immunizations, Brain Development, Health and Nutrition, and

    Safety. Parents receive essential educational, medical, safety, and nutritional items to take

    home after each session, to implement best practices learned in class. (emphasis added)

    Inspired by the Harlem Childrens Baby College, the philosophy underlying the Tied Together

    parenting initiative is one of scaling-up whereby programs are linked and integrated as part of a

    multi-level systemic intervention. At the Martha OBryan Center the idea of scaling-up is referred

    to as the highway. Practically speaking, the goal is to connect parents who are participating in Tied

    Together to other appropriate programs (e.g., GED classes) and services that will strengthen and

    support the family.

    Funding: Center for Community Studies, Governors Office of Childrens Care Coordination

    *Graduate Assistant Bernadette Doykos was with the Harlem Childrens Zone before joining CRA

    and working with Bess on the Tied Together Project. She states, One of the projects I worked

    closely with was called Baby College, and is the program after which Tied Together is modeled.

    Upon entering CRA, I was paired with Kimberly Bess as my advisor who has worked closely with

    Tied Together since it's most nascent phases. It's been a phenomenal experience for me to work

    even more closely with a programmatic model with which I was already familiar. We work together

    with the staff, conducting observations, pre- and posttest surveys and social network maps, and

    exit interviews.

  • 9

    Tied Together Program Preliminary Survey Results: Mean Scores

    Number of Survey

    Participants Minimum Maximum Mean

    Pre-Program: Knowledge of Infant

    Development Inventory Percent Correct

    Score

    100 20% 90% 67.56%

    Post-Program: Knowledge of Infant

    Development Inventory Percent Correct

    Score

    50 31% 92% 71.10%

    Pre-Program: Neighborhood Sense of

    Community

    99 1.00 5.00 2.6957

    Post-Program: Neighborhood Sense of

    Community

    50 1.00 5.00 3.1737

    Pre-Program: Tied-Together Sense of

    Community

    96 1.25 5.00 4.3326

    Post-Program: Tied-Together Sense of

    Community

    50 1.87 5.00 4.6153

    Pre-Program: Parent Confidence Scale 100 2.93 4.93 4.3056

    Post-Program: Parent Confidence Scale 48 3.57 5.00 4.4762

    ...I have a lot of friends interested in the

    Tied Together program. It was just very full

    this time around.but, a lot of people don't

    feel connected to the neighborhood, but

    they feel very connected in this Tied

    Together program, which is a good thing

    because we actually want to hear other

    people's good stories. I mean the

    neighborhood's kind of tragic and we don't

    like the neighborhood, but this is our sense

    of community. Tied Together is our

    community. (Tied Together participant)

    Kim Bess and Bernadette Doykos presented on this project this

    summer at the International Network for Social Network Analy-

    sis (INSNA) Sunbelt Conference in Italy.

    Title: Whos in and whos out: The construction of parent social

    support networks

  • 10

    Small Grant Spotlight

    The Impact of Hope VI Housing Programs on Neighborhoods

    Claire Smrekar, Principal Investigator; Lydia Bentley, Ph.D. student

    Recent studies sponsored by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and

    private research groups have examined the neighborhood effects of HOPE VI projects (Holin

    et al., 2003; Turbov and Piper, 2005; Zielenbach, 2002). Although the magnitude of positive

    neighborhood impact varies across sites, most reports indicate reductions in rates of poverty,

    crime and unemployment in and near

    HOPE VI neighborhoods. None of these

    studies, however, explores the impact of

    HOPE VI community revitalization on

    nearby neighborhood schools, prompting

    an array of important, unanswered

    policy questions. This study of

    neighborhood change, neighborhood

    capacity, and neighborhood effects on

    schools is anchored to conceptual models

    found in traditional urban sociology.

    This sociological approach blends

    ecological (Berry and Kasarda, 1977;

    Kornhauser, 1978; Park and Burgess,

    1916, 1925) and social area analysis

    (Shevsky and Bell, 1955) models to

    understand how structural conditions

    are associated with social processes that

    are bounded by the physical space of neighborhoods. Our attention rests with the social

    processes and structures in communities that impact the educational experiences and

    opportunities of families and children. This is the first effort to systematically examine the

    impact of HOPE VI neighborhood

    revitalization on traditional public

    schools in such areas as change in

    social structures, perceptions of

    safety, and social engagement in

    schooling. As part of this study, we

    also have conducted an analysis of the

    effect of HOPE VI revitalization on

    neighborhood housing stock, including

    values, sales and maintenance.

    Photos courtesy of Claire Smrekar: Traditional public housing

    HOPE VI public housing

  • 11

    Resisting Environmental Injustice: A Multi-site, Process, Outcomes, and Network-based

    Evaluation of Participatory Permitting Workshops for Tribal Communities in New Mexico

    Courte Voorhees, Principal Investigator

    Humans have significantly transformed the Earth, sometimes with destructive effects rang-

    ing from local pollution to global catastrophe (Miller, 2000). Since the 1970s, environmental

    issues have become more visible in mainstream society but environmental justice (EJ) advo-

    cates claim that there are still persistent environmental injustices that have not gotten the

    attention afforded more mainstream issues (Taylor, 2000). Tribal lands in the Southwest

    are some of the nations leaders

    in poverty and diminished ac-

    cess to amenities (Webster &

    Bishaw, 2007) while the U.S.

    Southwest has been a focal point

    for tribal experiences of environ-

    mental injustice (Kuletz, 1998)

    although recent policy changes

    may reshape the future land-

    scape of tribal interactions with

    state governments. These

    changes have provided an oppor-

    tunity to reshape environmental

    decision making for tribes and

    forge beneficial relationships

    with the state.

    In response to this opportunity,

    Voorhees collaborated with rep-

    resentatives from the New Mex-

    ico Environment Department

    (NMED) and the American In-

    dian Law Center (AILC), creating workshops to disseminate policy and technical informa-

    tion to all 22 New Mexico tribes. These workshops, part of a larger participatory action re-

    search (PAR) project, train tribal communities to utilize EJ policies, create network connec-

    tions with state environmental regulators, and encourage tribal workers, leaders, and com-

    munity members to take an active role in environmental decision making and forging in-

    creased community readiness. Using a PAR lens, Voorhees used a mixed-method design in-

    cluding quantitative/qualitative program evaluation, participatory social network analysis,

    and qualitative interviews. Partially funded by a Center for Community Studies small

    grant, Voorhees helped plan, implement, and evaluate the participatory workshops. Thus

    far, analysis of process evaluation data shows promising response to the workshops and po-

    tential for tribal community use of information. Voorhees currently collecting final out-

    comes data and analysis of these data is ongoing. He anticipates completion before August

    of 2010.

    Photo courtesy of Courte Voorhees: Tour of a solid waste site at Isleta Pueblo as

    part of the second participatory workshop on environmental justice and permit-

    ting.

  • 12

    New Programs

    The Center for Community Studies (Peabody College, Vanderbilt University) is committed to

    bridging academic and community resources. The Community Matching program differs

    from traditional student internship programs in that it is more flexible and adaptable to the

    changing needs and capacities of community organizations. This year we pilot tested the

    project and had 15 organizations request assistance. Of these we succeeded in making

    matches with interested students for 5 of these requests. The strong positive response to the

    program led us to begin to seek funding to facilitate greater student participation and

    continue insure effective faculty supervision. We also have reached out to field research

    classes as a way of meeting the demand. For example, a masters and PhD graduate class in

    Action Research undertook several of the projects in 2009-2010.

    The Housing Fund

    CRA student Andrew Greer assisted The Housing Fund (a local CDFI) with an assessment

    of down-payment need in Davidson County, with an update of THF's website, and with a

    project to study potential market demand and implementation approaches for Shared-Equity

    homeownership. For more information on this work on shared equity, see page 7 and/or

    contact Andrew Greer ([email protected]).

    Magdalene House

    CDA students Nicole Garcia, Jenny Gray, Angie Harris, and Jessica Thompson worked with

    Magdalene House, a free, non-medical recovery and support residential program, to help

    address the issue of affordable housing for graduates of the program. Their research focused

    on individual, program, and community barriers to and possible solutions for achieving

    independent living. For more information, contact Nicole Garcia ([email protected]),

    Jenny Gray ([email protected]), Angie Harris ([email protected]), or

    Jessica Thompson ([email protected]).

    Metro Public Health Department

    CDA students Jessica Thompson and Andy DAlessandro worked with the Ryan White

    Planning Council, including matriculating CRA student Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein, to

    better understand the Council's training needs related to understanding data and data

    display. Their work included developing a logic model, creating and administering a survey

    to gauge the councils understanding of data concepts, and using the information from the

    survey to implement a data training workshop. The workshop included teaching Planning

    Council members basic data concepts including commonly used public health terminology

    and showed the Council members how to better understand basic data displays. The

    workshop will ultimately help Planning Council members be able to make more informed

    decisions regarding resource allocation as they will have a better foundation in data

    regarding the HIV community in the Nashville Metro Statistical Area. For more

    information, contact Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein

    ([email protected])

    Community Matching Program

  • 13

    Metro Nashville Public Schools

    In an expansion of an existing partnership between CCS faculty and several metro schools,

    CRA student Adam Voight and CDA student Laura Vilines worked with MNPS and

    Alignment Nashville on a youth-violence-prevention project at Jere Baxter Middle

    School. The goals of their project were to understand students and student social needs,

    evaluate existing social services in the school, and refine the protocol for linking at-risk

    students to appropriate service providers. Using data gathered through an annual survey

    they demonstrated need for targeted social services and found a positive impact of service

    utilization.

    For more information on this project, contact

    Adam Voight ([email protected]) or

    Laura Vilines ([email protected])

    Urban Housing Solutions

    Teaching and Learning doctoral student, Christopher Keyes, and CDA students Wes Jami-

    son, Amanda Taylor and Courtney Williams worked with Urban Housing Solutions on their

    Health Matters program at Mercury Courts, which is a 174apartment low-income resi-

    dence. Their goals were to determine if emergency calls have decreased since the program

    was implemented, and to assess the current health care needs of residents. For more infor-

    mation, contact Chris Keyes ([email protected]), Wes Jamison

    ([email protected]), Amanda Taylor ([email protected]),

    or Courtney Williams ([email protected]).

    Nashville Metropolitan Planning

    Organization

    CDA students Laura Stamm and Emily Stew-

    art helped develop a health impact assessment

    to inform the expansion of the Music City Star,

    which is Nashvilles commuter rail system. In

    their literature review, the student research-

    ers explored how the urban form relates to

    rates of obesity. They helped MPO design, im-

    plement and analyze an online survey to as-

    sess needs. In addition, they conducted site

    visits to Nashville neighborhoods scheduled for

    transit oriented development and worked with

    a design team to integrate their findings into

    the design. With MPO officials, they visited

    Denver and were tasked to study the citys

    transit oriented design innovations.

    For more information, contact Laura Stamm

    ([email protected]) or

    Emily Stewart

    ([email protected]).

  • 14

    New Programs

    The Center for Community Studies is working on a database that is structured as an

    integrated, longitudinal, multi-dimensional data system for Nashville/Davidson County. It

    is useful for applied, scholarly, and public policy endeavors. This relational database was

    developed in SQL (structured query language - a computer programming language) using

    data drawn from the US Census (1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000) and from Metro planning.

    A relational database matches data from different datasets by finding common

    characteristics across those datasets so that they can be linked. In other words, the datasets

    talk to each other using common variables. For example, we can combine voting, crime,

    health and home ownership records at the parcel level (individual property level), which is

    the common denominator, to get a better idea of a household and neighborhood context.

    This provides a richer understanding of community processes than what is generated by just

    one of these datasets. Not all data are available at the parcel level, in those cases, we

    aggregate up to larger geographic units. Our existing database is both cross-sectional and

    longitudinal and captures data at different geographic scales related to multiple community

    variables such as voting, crime rates, health indicators, housing, and so on. At different

    geographic scales, we will be able to look at community dynamics and using geographic

    information system (GIS), we can look at these dynamics spatially.

    This database will give us an unprecedented look at the contextual impact of housing and

    other neighborhood features on individual outcomes. It promises large-scale collaborative

    studies with scholars and community partners. The relational database team currently

    consists of Professors Susan Saegert, Paul Speer, Beth Shinn, and Maury Nation (HOD), and

    Claire Smrekar (LPO). The projects research assistants are doctoral students Andrew

    Greer, Adam Voight, and Jill Robinson (CRA).

    Community Statistics Relational Database

  • 15

    CATEGORY POTENTIAL DATA

    Economy

    Tax records*

    Employment data

    Education Standardized test Disciplinary actions Head Start records

    Health

    Immunizations

    Vital records ER admissions

    Social Services Public assistance Day care licenses Mental health

    Safety

    Crime rates Child abuse Liquor outlets

    Commercial data PRIZM data

    Community

    resources

    Social service

    agencies

    Community Voting

    Housing

    Foreclosures

    Tax assessments Building permits

    Environment

    Pollution

    Toxic waste sites

    The table below provides an outline of datasets initially sought for the database. This is in

    no way exhaustive, and not all data sought will be successfully accessed. The most critical

    aspect of this project is data access and access in disaggregated form.

    So far, approximately $65,000 has gone into the development of the database, and we are

    currently in a capital campaign to raise funds to further develop the database. Our goal is to

    raise $150,000 for this research tool.

    We would need additional funding so that 1) we can purchase server space and 2) our

    programmer can be paid to finish the last steps of integrating the database and web

    application.

    However, even in its current stage of development, the database has been a valuable tool.

    For example, it was used in the successful application of a $30.5 million Neighborhood

    Stabilization Program 2 grant (see page 7).

    * An underline indicates we currently have those data.

  • 16

    Center-Sponsored Events

    Our fall conference was held on October 30. Every fall, CCS hosts a one-day conference to

    highlight the research and action projects engaged in by our affiliated faculty, students, and

    community members. Colleagues from multiple departments across Vanderbilt and

    Tennessee State University were invited to present their work in panel sessions. This year,

    we added moderators to promote discussion during the sessions. We would like to thank the

    following faculty and student moderators: Sandra Barnes, Oluchi Nwosu, Doug Perkins,

    Beth Shinn, and Craig Anne Heflinger

    The following pages list the session abstracts from our conference:

    Housing & Urban Development Josh Bazuin

    HOPE VI and the Right to Housing: Moral Discourse around a Two-tiered Public Housing

    System

    HOPE VI represents a retreat from the principle of a right to housing, reestablishing a

    meritocratic system where a deserving minority of people are given high quality housing in

    exchange for a meeting behavioral norms established by the landlord; people unable or

    unwilling to conform with these standards are relegated to substandard, unsafe housing.

    Based on interviews with 113 HOPE VI residents in Nashville, Tennessee, Bazuin examined

    the moral discourse around a two-tiered public housing system, considering the identity

    work resident of HOPE VI developments do to justify the disparity between the redeveloped

    units and their run-down counterparts. These justifications were then contrasted with the

    views of several theorists and

    practitioners who have considered the

    place of a right to housing in public

    policy and public discourse.

    Jim Fraser and Josh Bazuin

    The Contours of Mixed-Income Living in

    the Music City

    One of the cornerstones of developing

    mixed-income housing has been to

    promote changes in impoverished

    neighborhoods through transforming

    social relations that constitute it. Fraser

    and Bazuin reported on a study

    conducted in four HOPE VI

    redevelopments in Nashville, Tennessee,

    to examine the ways in which people

    experience everyday life, and, in turn,

    how their homespace provides opportunities and obstacles for working towards an enhanced

    quality of life. The authors concluded with theorization on mixed-income living as it relates

    to urban redevelopment/city building more broadly.

    Fall Conference

    Conference photos courtesy of Ting Li Wang (visit www.tingliwang.com)

  • 17

    Ginger Pepper

    Jefferson Street Renewal Project

    Through the leadership of Jefferson Street United Merchants Partnership, the TN

    Department of Transportation, the City of Nashville, Tennessee State University (TSU), and

    the Department of Housing and Urban Development, over $2 million will be invested in

    Jefferson Street in North Nashville over the next three years. Improvements will hopefully

    lay the groundwork for economic and community improvement. In September 2009, TSUs

    Center for Service Learning and Civic Engagement was awarded a grant from the U.S.

    Housing and Urban Development Historically Black Colleges and Universities Program.

    Funds will be used to invigorate the historic Jefferson Street corridor, as well as renovate

    homes of elderly citizens in North Nashville. TSU will use some of the funds to rehabilitate

    the Interstate 40-Jefferson Street underpass to create a safe, accessible, historically-reverent

    gathering space, called the Gateway to Heritage. TSU will allocate more than $400,000 of

    grant funds to improve fencing, lighting and landscaping of the underpass, as well as create

    a mural and painting plan to document through art the history of Jefferson Street. TSU

    faculty and students in art, architectural engineering, geography, history and other

    disciplines will participate in the project. Currently, business students at TSU are learning

    about Jefferson Street and will conduct survey research to determine what residents,

    students, faculty, and staff of the nearby universities (TSU, Fisk, and Meharry) like about

    Jefferson Street and what they would like to see changed.

    Andrew Greer

    Differences in Default: Examining Neighborhood Characteristics and Exploring Resident

    Connections to Homeownership

    Residents of neighborhoods with high foreclosure rates have multiple reasons for

    homeownership exit. Purely quantitative studies that examine the relationship between

    high-risk lending and mortgage default tend to emphasize individual financial factors and

    minimize defaulter psycho-social factors that may highlight homeowner exit rationales.

    While recent qualitative work has elucidated the psychological impacts of foreclosure, these

    investigations have not focused on how and why defaulters stay or exit their homes and how

    neighborhood characteristics impact these trends. This mixed-methods study in Nashville,

    TN addresses these gaps. Cluster analyses of census tracts explore whether neighborhoods

    with high foreclosure rates have unique characteristics based on foreclosure predictors from

    previous studies. North Nashville had above average percentages of high-cost loans,

    African Americans, female heads of households, low median incomes, lower education levels,

    unemployment, and properties vacant for ninety days or more. Antioch had above average

    percentages of highly leveraged loans, foreign born citizens, newer homes, employment, and

    higher income. Interviews with defaulters from each neighborhood were presented to expose

    psycho-social factors that inform defaulters and further solidify how neighborhood attributes

    relate to these factors. Implications for foreclosure prevention and interventions, such as

    Shared Equity housing, were discussed.

    Mick Nelson

    Quantifying Racial Dynamics in Housing: A Tale of One City and Three Studies.

    In this presentation Nelson outlined some results from his studies of racial dynamics in the

    Nashville housing market. These studies ask the question: To what extent is race a factor in

    the desirability of neighborhoods and the location of households? Different theoretical

    perspectives on this question were explored with conclusions drawn from the results of

    extant literature as well as the preliminary results of his research.

  • 18

    Center-Sponsored Events

    Education

    Christon Arthur & Tammy Lipsey

    Building Literacy through P-16 Service-Learning Partnerships

    Tennessee State University, College of Education and Center for Service Learning and Civic

    Engagement have formed a literacy partnership with Metro Nashville Public Schools. This

    partnership is a model for merging university, community and school resources. The

    Literacy Partnership improves academic achievement of P-12 and college students by

    providing school-based, university supervised reading clinics. The clinics offer hands-on

    experience in the teaching of reading for pre-service teachers as well as valuable one-on-one

    tutoring for struggling students in grades K-6. Pre-service teacher learn a five-part research

    based method for tutoring struggling readers. Students in the school attend the one-to-one

    tutoring session for 30 minutes, twice a week for a minimum of eight weeks. The

    partnership began in 2007 and has been in operation for four semesters with successful

    results. This semester, three newly established school-based reading clinics are in

    operation, McKissack (Pearl Cohn 9th Grade Center, John Early Middle School, and

    Charlotte Park Elementary School. This partnership promotes promising practices in

    literacy that will significantly raise the level of literacy achievement for all students and

    better prepare pre-service teachers for the classroom. The effort has been partially funded

    by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and Tennessee Board of

    Regents.

    Emily Lample

    Knowledge-sharing Practices in a Colombian Education Program: A Look at Strength of Ties

    in Students Networks of Knowledge-sharing

    While a larger community-level impact is often a secondary goal of education programs,

    there is limited empirical research regarding the paths along which ideas may travel

    between students of a program and other members of the community. The case of the

    Preparation for Social Action Program in Colombia highlights the potential for

    educational programs both to diffuse ideas into the community and to draw upon local

    knowledge for student learning. Granovetters strength of weak ties theory offers a useful

    framework by which to understand the different ways that students can engage in

    knowledge-sharing with members of the larger community. This study draws from a mixed-

    method approach to social network analysis, building from 26 student ego-network

    representations, interviews with 19 students and 3 teachers of the program, curriculum

    analysis and field observations. It identifies patterns in students knowledge-sharing

    practices according to strength of tie along with typologies of student knowledge-sharing

    networks to explore implications for the role of knowledge-sharing in enabling education to

    contribute to community change.

    Fall Conference

  • 19

    John Vick

    The Louisville Schoolyards Project: Building Spaces for Learning and Community

    The Louisville Schoolyards Project is a design and community-building process for two

    elementary schools in Metro Louisville. Researchers from the University of Louisville

    partnered with the local school system to facilitate a community-based redesign of the

    schoolyards at two environmental studies magnate schools to create outdoor learning and

    recreation spaces for the school children, as well as establish shared spaces for use by both

    the school and the surrounding neighborhood. The research team developed a participatory

    framework to engage teachers, parents, neighborhood residents, neighborhood organizations,

    and city officials in the process. The purpose of this process was twofold: 1) to gather input

    from potential users of the space to inform the schoolyard redesign plan, and 2) to build

    community and create a shared sense of ownership centered on the use and maintenance of

    the schoolyard space. This presentation focused on the process of engaging the community

    in the redesign process, how the

    process was influenced by external

    factors and funding constraints,

    and lessons learned by the

    facilitation team.

    Gilman Whiting

    Up Against the Wall: Young Black

    Men and the Scholar Identity

    Institute @ Vanderbilt University

    Equal and equitable education in America is key to a life full with opportunity and success.

    To date, far too many young Black children have been, and are continuing to be, left out of

    doors. Annually, in many cities across America, the graduation rate for young Black males

    has plummeted below 25%. In 2009, research tells us that even those Black males fortunate

    enough to survive to college, and enter with high achievement scores are graduating less

    than 25%. In fact, Black male athletes (traditionally not know for high academics) are now

    graduating at a higher rate. Why?

    This and other questions were answered in this lively presentation. The presenter discussed

    a psychosocial model of achievement used for five years at Vanderbilt University.

    Participants of this session saw the programs participants in a three-time award winning

    video, and discussed how this works directly impacts the work of the Center for Community

    Studies mission. The author of the Scholar Identity Model presented the past, present and

    future plans for this published work.

  • 20

    Center-Sponsored Events

    Migration

    Benjamin Siankam

    Doctors Beyond Borders: Ecological and Psychopolitical Validity of Medical Migration from

    Sub-Saharan Africa

    If people admittedly vote with their feet, then migration is a political act, and skilled

    migration an even more powerful political statement. Traditional frameworks used to

    analyze skilled migration have not devoted much attention to the role of power in relation

    to migrants decision to leave, stay, or return. Yet, throughout much of Sub-Saharan Africa

    (SSA), many skilled professionals are asserting their power by emigrating overseas. Hence,

    a culture of skilled migration is expanding and is now entrenched in several countries.

    What is commonly referred to as "brain drain" is a countermovement of human resources

    whereby a significant fraction of the most valuable and most essential members of a given

    country uproot themselves from the place where their identity is anchored, and settle

    abroad to live and work. In many SSA countries, this comes at a very high cost as the

    aggrieved community that is left behind oftentimes experiences a significant decrease in its

    circumstances as a result of skilled emigration. To reflect the complexity of the problem,

    Siankam examined the medical brain drain from SSA using an eco-psychopolitically valid

    framework. The framework takes into account three core elements, namely context, power,

    and change. It was argued that migrants yearn to breathe free, and skilled migrants are not

    merely commodified agents within the global space of flows, but are essentially in pursuit of

    liberation and wellness. This may ultimately be attained by way of return migration.

    Doug Perkins

    Community Participation by Migrants and Long-time Residents in the U.S

    Community organizing, participation and migration were put in brief historical and global

    context. A comprehensive framework for analyzing and promoting empowerment at

    multiple levels was presented. At each level, sociocultural, political, economic, and physical

    environmental forms of capital were considered. The framework provides a guide for

    transdisciplinary research questions and development. 3 studies of social capital and

    community civic participation in urban samples of migrants and longtime residents in the

    United States were presented . Studies 1, 2, and 3: Individual and streetblock-level

    observational and survey data from New York City, Baltimore, and Salt Lake City predicted

    residents' participation in block and neighborhood associations, both cross-sectionally and

    longitudinally. Income, home ownership, minority status, and residential stability were

    positively, but inconsistently, related to participation. Community-focused social cognitions

    (organizational efficacy, civic responsibility, community attachments) and social capital

    behaviors (neighboring, volunteer work through churches and other community

    organizations) were consistently and positively predictive of participation at both the

    individual and block levels. Comparison of long-time residents vs. recent migrants were

    emphasized.

    Fall Conference

  • 21

    Neal Palmer, Doug Perkins, and Xu Qingwen

    Community Participation by Migrants and Long-time Residents in China

    This paper compared community participation by migrants and a nationally

    representative sample in China. In the national sample, they examined sense of

    community, neighboring behavior, and social capital and their ability to predict local

    political participation. Rural, older and married residents and those with a primary or

    high school education and higher perceived socio-economic status were more likely to

    participate. For urban residents, knowing ones neighbors is more important whereas in

    rural areas, neighboring behavior is more important, but both predict participation. In

    the 2nd study, they used survey data from a convenience sample of migrant workers in

    seven cities across China to offer predictors of three types of community participation: 1)

    amount of contact with community organizations, 2) frequency of help sought from

    community organizations, and 3) the rate of more formal participation in Urban

    Resident Committee (URC) meetings. Results indicate that education, neighborhood

    social interaction, and organizational social capital predict all three types of community

    participation. Additional predictors include number of children currently residing in the

    household, duration of residence in the current city, trust in community members, place

    attachment, and occupational quality of life (for amount of contact with community

    organizations); number of children currently residing in the household and neighborhood

    social capital (for frequency of help sought from community organizations); and number

    of elderly kin living in the household and place attachment (for participation in URC

    meetings). Implications for labor and migration policy, community participation, &

    democratization in China were discussed.

  • 22

    Center-Sponsored Events

    Justice, Community Organizing, & Spatial Barriers

    Laurel Lunn, Neal Palmer, and Sharon Shields

    Social Determinants of Obesity in a Rural Southwestern Community: A Collaborative

    Project.

    Recent trends in the New Mexico population show higher levels of obesity than ever before;

    such increases are particularly alarming for children. Many communities within or adjacent

    to Native American reservations have significant populations spread out over great

    distances. This leads to various barriers in accessing high quality, affordable, healthy food,

    as well as barriers that hinder participation in physical activity. We used survey, focus

    group, and community audit data to explore social determinants related to the prevalence of

    pediatric obesity in Caucasian, Hispanic, and Native American children living in the rural

    Gallup, NM area. We paid particular attention to the intersection of geography, culture,

    perceptions, and behavior. Our results aimed to inform the development of effective

    community-based intervention strategies to combat the spread of obesity and early-onset

    diabetes. The authors also presented lessons learned from the research project, with a

    particular focus on the experiences of undergraduate, master's, and doctoral level students.

    Contributors included Veronica Calvin, Sarah Edmiston, Liz Gilbert, Akua Hill, Julie

    Phenis, Laura Shade, Teresa Sharp, Nora Testerman, and Courtney Williams.

    Courte Voorhees

    Resisting Environmental Injustice: A Multi-site Evaluation of Participatory Permitting

    Workshops for Tribal Communities in New Mexico

    The Four Corners region of the southwestern United States has been relegated to a

    wasteland by both government and industry (Kuletz, 1998). Tribal peoples have had little or

    no say about mining, waste, and the related dangers and health risks while often carrying

    a disproportionately large burden of negative consequences and reaping few benefits

    (McLeod, Switkes, & Hayes, 1983). In response to the Clinton administration's

    Environmental Justice Executive Order in 1994, New Mexico became the 6th state to enact

    a policy based on environmental justice (EJ) principles (Richardson, 2005). In response to

    the opportunity created by this executive order, the Environmental Justice Tribal Liaison

    for the State of New Mexico and the American Indian Law Center (AILC) at the University

    of New Mexico have begun creating participatory workshops to disseminate details about

    changes in permitting regulations and encourage use of these regulations to protect

    community health and well-being. These workshops will encourage tribal leaders and

    environmental employees to take an active role in permitting processes that will affect their

    communities. Voorhees provided input and assistance in planning, organizing, and

    implementing the workshops as well as conducted an evaluation of the workshops to

    improve their impact.

    Fall Conference

  • 23

    Eric Tesdahl and Paul Speer

    Building Organizational Collaborations at a Community Scale: An Examination of

    Community Organizing

    The classic organizing model developed by Saul Alinksy took place in urban areas with

    dense networks of individuals and institutions. Since the Alinsky era, the urban form has

    undergone a remarkable transformation that can be characterized, more than anything, by

    spatial expansion presenting new challenges for local groups working to build their social

    power. An examination of how spatial constraints can be overcome is critical if community

    organizing efforts are to operate at the scale necessary to affect the change sufficient to

    improve quality of life for community residents in our globalizing world (Orr, 2007). Previous

    work in this field suggests that cultivating collaboration across space has become more

    complicated undertaking due to processes of deindustrialization and suburban sprawl (Knox

    & Agnew, 1998). This study examined organizational participation in two community

    organizing efforts in a Midwestern and a Western community. Both organizing efforts are

    structured as federations multiple (~10 to 40) local groups collaborating together on issues

    of common interest. Specifically, Tesdahl and Speer sought to test whether spatial

    proximity significantly predicts collaboration among federation members. Social capital

    theory suggests that trust developed through relationship can enhance collaboration (Lin,

    2001). This study tested whether development of relationships can counteract the negative

    effects of space. They hypothesized that the effects of spatial distance between organizations

    will weaken over time as a result of previous collaboration.

    Youth & Family

    Paul Juarez, Kimberly Bess, Vicente Samaniego, and Brandon Hill

    Engaging Youth in Research: The Role of Social Networks as Protective Factors in

    Preventing Youth Violence

    The aim of this pilot study was to assess the role of social networks of high school students

    in preventing youth violence. For the purpose of this study violence prevention was

    operationalized as safe places, caring adults/mentors, and job training/work opportunities.

    The primary hypothesis addressed by this study was that strong social networks associated

    with personal safety, caring adults, and job training/youth employment opportunities are

    independently associated with lower risk to youth for interpersonal violence. Data collection

    included integration of outcomes of youth surveys and secondary data sets. Study results

    allowed us to examine the relationship between risk of violence, other risk and protective

    factors, and the strength, density, and spatial proximity of their social networks. Social

    network analysis was used to assess the characteristics of their social networks, including

    strength, centrality, and density. Results also were geo-coded and pulled into ArcView/GIS

    program to provide a spatial depiction of the social networks of youth. Analyses provide a

    better understanding of the relationship of social networks of youth for safe places, mentors/

    caring adults, and job training/work opportunities and risk for youth violence.

    Lindsay Satterwhite, Velma McBride Murry, and Cady Berkel

    The Role of Gender in Family Processes: A Decade Review 1999-2009 & Future

    Recommendations

    This presentation focused on the role gender plays in family processes and the way these

    constructs have been studied in the literature from 1999-2009. Specific areas of focus

    included caregiving, work/family balance, division of labor, and the changing family

    structure. Each of these areas were discussed in terms of the theories, assumptions, and

    methodologies used in the literature. Critical perspectives and recommendations for future

    research were discussed as well.

  • 24

    Center-Sponsored Events

    Health

    Sara Cottrill

    Family Connection Pilot Study

    Families with a child suffering from a serious emotional or behavioral disorder face unique

    challenges. Tennessee Voices for Childrens Family Connection program of peer support

    aims to solve some of these problems. This pilot study utilized qualitative interviews of both

    family caregivers (FCs) and Family Support Providers (FSPs) to understand some of the key

    elements of the program, including services provided, what is most useful, and barriers or

    challenges in the program. The value of the FSPs, empowerment, needing more time, and

    the challenges working with the Department of Childrens Services were all salient themes

    throughout the interviews. The findings of this study give vital information to Tennessee

    Voices for Children in regards to possible program improvement and data to help influence

    to possible funders. In addition, this pilot study informs researchers preparing for a grant to

    implement and evaluate a similar program.

    Eli Poe

    Pediatric Obesity Community Programs: Barriers & Facilitators toward Sustainability

    Our current generation of young people could become the first generation to live shorter

    lives than their parents. Families need resources in their community to address this issue.

    Identifying barriers and facilitators of community organizations to offer obesity-related

    services is a first step in understanding sustainable community programs. The objective of

    this study is to identify common barriers and facilitators in community organizational

    programs designed to prevent or reduce pediatric obesity. We conducted an exploratory

    qualitative research study based on grounded theory. Thirty-six community organizations

    were identified based on self-descriptions of goals involving pediatric obesity. Semi-

    structured, systematic, face-to-face interviews among program directors (n=24) were

    recorded, transcribed, and coded for recurrent themes. Seventy percent of organizations

    indicated that obesity prevention/treatment was their explicit goal with remaining groups

    indicating healthy lifestyles as a more general goal. Facilitators to provision of these

    programs included: programmatic enhancements such as improved curriculums (73%),

    community involvement such as volunteers (62.5%), and partnerships with other programs

    (54.2%). Barriers that threatened sustainability included lack of consistent funding (43.8%),

    lack of consistent participation from the target population (41.7%) and lack of support staff

    (20.8%). New approaches in fostering partnerships between organizations need to be

    developed.

    Fall Conference

  • 25

    Kathy Makara

    Experience of the Creative Arts with People in Recovery from Mental Illness or Substance

    Abuse.

    When speaking of recovery in mental illness and substance abuse, it is not a matter of

    being cured, but rather an ability to lead a full life. Consumers and service providers of

    mental illness and substance abuse programs are interested in both internal and

    external factors that lead to recovery. The Creative Arts Program, through the Middle

    Tennessee Mental Health and Substance Abuse Coalition. (MTMHSAC) has been

    involved with bringing art programs to peer support centers throughout Middle

    Tennessee with the hopes of contributing to recovery. In this session data was presented

    from 26 interviews conducted with artists throughout Middle Tennessee who are in

    recovery from mental illness and/or substance abuse. Through the MTMHSAC, the

    participants had the opportunity to take classes, obtain art supplies, and display

    artwork . The artists shared their experience about participation in the program and art

    making in general. Analysis was conducted on the interviews for emergent themes,

    including but not limited to recovery domains. Implications were discussed for the art

    program and for further research.

    Closing Session: Academic and Community Collaborations

    Action research students reported on their collaborative projects with community

    partners: The Housing Fund; Metro Nashville Public Schools The Middle School

    Project; Magdalene House; Metro Public Health; Nashville Area Metro Planning

    Organization; Urban Housing Solutions.

  • 26

    Center-Sponsored Events

    Friday, August 28

    Bob Newbrough (Professor Emeritus) Newbrough was the director of the original Center, from its inception in

    1966 until it ceased operation in 1981.

    The Center for Community Studies: Thriving in Context, Past and Present

    This colloquium explored the history of the Center for Community Studies, emphasizing parallels and contrasts

    between its previous and present context. Beyond a history of research work and structure, the purpose of this

    colloquium was to celebrate current successes of the CCS and determine if institutional knowledge from the

    past contains relevant lessons for our current context.

    Friday, October 2

    Michelle Fine and Maria Torre (The Graduate Center of The City University of New York)

    Participatory Action Research in Prisons, Schools and Communities

    Michelle Fine is a distinguished professor of Social Psychology, Womens Studies and Urban Education at The

    Graduate Center of The City University of New York, where she is a founding member of the Participatory

    Action Research and Design Collective. Her research has been organized through participatory action research

    and focuses on how youth think about and contest injustice in schools, communities and prisons. Among other

    awards, Fine received the 2008 Social Justice award from the Cross Cultural Winter Roundtable.

    Maria Elena Torre is the director of the Institute for Participatory Action Research and Design at The

    Graduate Center of The City University of New York. Committed to participatory approaches that feature

    spaces of radical inclusion in communities such as schools and prisons, she is a co-author of Echoes of Brown:

    Youth Documenting and Performing the Legacy of Brown v. Board of Education and Changing Minds: The

    Impact of College on a Maximum Security Prison.

    Friday, October 16

    Richard Lloyd (Assistant Professor of Sociology)

    East Nashville Skyline: The Great Tomato Toss and the Remaking of a Local Landscape.

    This presentation examined familiar intersections of urban ideology and neighborhood change in a less familiar

    setting Nashville. Nashvilles unevenly gentrifying East Side was used as a vehicle for critically engaging

    prevailing discourses of civic design and urban culture: the New Urbanism and the Creative City.

    Focusing on the juxtaposition of a low-density district targeted for redevelopment in East Nashville with the

    obdurate presence of neighboring public housing projects, this talk exposed the practical contradictions and

    conflicts that accompany the implementation of one-size-fits-all material and cultural models within distinct

    and largely uncongenial urban environments. A dramatic encounter between old and new styles of urban

    development in East Nashvilles recent history the Great Tomato Toss of 2006 was contextualized within an

    analysis of broader political processes and intellectual currents.

    Friday, December 4

    Damian Williams (Sociology Ph.D. candidate) with discussant Beth Shinn (Professor of Human and

    Organizational Development)

    The Drama of Contingent Work: Homeless Day Laborers' Negotiation of the Job Queue

    Drawing on ethnographic observation in four-day labor agencies located in Nashvilles Lafayette district, this

    talk examined how interactions between homeless workers and day-labor dispatchers create an informal

    system of workplace control in a seemingly chaotic employment arrangement. Specifically, Damian examined

    how homeless day laborers comprehend and negotiate dispatchers allocation of jobs (i.e., the job queue) and

    show how this interactive process creates workers loyalty to one particular agency by turning them against one

    another. Damian suggested that this divide-and-rule dynamic creates a provisional structure that enables

    dispatchers to retain a reliably contingent, transient workforce. This exploitative workplace structure is

    reinforced by the spatial mismatch between the Lafayette district and low-skilled jobs located on the urban

    periphery, as well as by homeless mens labor market limitations.

    Colloquia

  • 27

    Fri, Feb 19

    Katharine Donato (Professor of Sociology, Chair) with discussant Doug Perkins (Assistant Professor of Human

    and Organizational Development)

    Parental Involvement in Schools and Immigration in U.S. Destinations.

    Website: http://www.vanderbilt.edu/sociology/VDOS_People_KatharineDonato.shtml

    Friday, Feb 26

    Working Meeting: Center for Community Studies Matching Program

    Graduate students reported on their projects with local community partners. This was an informal discussion

    about issues and discoveries that have arisen during collaborative work with the community. We invited

    graduate students and faculty to attend to offer their feedback and advice for these students.

    Friday, March 19

    The Schools, Community, and Youth Research Group hosted a colloquium to showcase the research of several

    Peabody faculty whose work considers the intersections of education and

    community, issues of diversity, and social justice. Drs. Mimi Engel, Stella

    Flores, Maury Nation and Claire Smrekar each discussed their current

    research with a question and answer session that followed. This colloquium

    offered an opportunity to foster a greater degree of interdepartmental

    collegiality at Peabody among faculty and students interested in themes of

    schools, communities, youth development, and social justice.

    Friday, April 2

    Cecelia Tichi (William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of English)

    Professor Tichi lectured on her book entitled Civic Passions: Seven who

    Launched Progressive America. Following her lecture, CCS affiliated

    faculty commented on particular activists whose historical work aligns with

    their current research and/or action. Our featured discussants were Tony

    Brown (Sociology) and Paul Speer (HOD).

    Website: http://www.vanderbilt.edu/magazines/vanderbilt-

    magazine/2009/08/books-and-writers-tichi-wins-hubbell-medal-for-lifetime-

    achievement/

    Friday, April 30

    Michela Lenzi (visiting doctoral student from the University of Padua, Italy)

    The Role of Neighborhood Context for the Development of Adolescent Prosocial Behavior in Italy

    and Civic Engagement in Five Countries

    Friday, April 16

    This colloquium was organized by the Human and Organizational Development (HOD) Minority Student

    Committee and sponsored by the HOD and Sociology departments, the Vanderbilt Center for Community

    Studies, and the Divinity School.

    Colloquium with Juan Battle (Professor of Sociology, Public Health and Urban Education City

    University of New York)

    Social Justice Sexuality: Insights from a Public Sociologist

    An internationally known scholar, Battle is a Fulbright Senior Specialist and was the Fulbright

    Distinguished Chair of Gender Studies at the University of Klagenfurt, Austria. His research interests

    include race, sexuality and social justice. Battle currently is heading several large research endeavors

    examining race and sexuality in the United States, of which the largest is the Social Justice Sexuality

    initiative. He is a recent president of the Association of Black Sociologists and is actively involved with

    the American Sociological Association. In addition to publishing in many academic journals, Battle's

    work has been highlighted in popular national magazines, on radio shows and in newspapers. He was

    selected as one of the "Ten Black Men Transforming the World."

  • 28

    Active Research Projects

    This section highlights the projects engaged in by our affiliated members. This depicts

    the diversity of our Center members, their interests and talents.

    The Nashville Yard Project

    James Fraser and George Hornberger,

    Principal Investigators; Kimberly Bess

    (Neighborhood Network Analysis)

    The research team represents a combination of

    social scientists, hydrologists, and an

    environmental lawyer. The research will involve

    hydrology and soil studies, sociology,

    community, environmental, and social

    psychology, human geography, and

    environmental law and public policy as a

    coherent whole and will train students within a

    truly interdisciplinary research program. The

    project will focus on cultivating research

    methods and analysis skills, as well as broad

    theoretical knowledge of the questions to be

    investigated, among undergraduate and

    graduate students in several disciplines across

    multiple colleges and schools at Vanderbilt

    University. The project will also contribute to

    the development of research and

    education capacity of the nonprofits and community-based organizations operating in the Richland

    Creek watershed area in Nashville

    (particularly the Richland Creek

    Watershed Alliance and the

    Cumberland River Compact), other

    Nashville watersheds, and other

    urban regions of the United States.

    The project aims to assist

    environmental activist groups,

    homeowners associations, and other

    organizations to help homeowners

    make more environmentally friendly

    lawn care decisions. Additionally,

    the data sets and models we produce

    will be useful for environmental

    policy planning and for managing

    urban and suburban watershed

    environmental challenges.

    Funding: National Science

    Foundation

    Images courtesy of Jim Fraser

  • 29

    Exploring the Determinants of Household Environmental Behavior: A Socio-Spatial Analysis of

    Lawn Care Practices

    James Fraser, Principal Investigator

    In this research, James Fraser is examining the spatial distribution and the socioeconomic and

    environmental factors that influence residential lawn management behavior in Baltimore. As one of

    the key sources of nutrients that are exported into and threaten the biodiversity of the Chesapeake

    Bay, residential lawn management has to be understood as a complex activity occurring at the nexus

    of biophysical, spatial and socio-economic factors. Research design is multi-faceted and involves in-

    person household and organizational surveys, telephone interviews, soil sampling, high-resolution

    image analysis of residential patterns, and the analysis of census and commercial demographic and

    consumption information. These data are assembled into a GIS database, which is used to determine

    to what extent household versus neighborhood characteristics predict household environmental

    behavior. Interview and survey responses complement the analysis by exploring the mechanisms

    through which these predictors operate.

    Funding: National Science Foundation

    Collaborative Research: Exploring Homeland Security Fusion Centers (2010-2012)

    Torin Monahan and Priscilla Regan

    Governments are increasingly turning toward public-private partnerships for the provision of

    national security. In the United States, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has supported

    the creation of fusion centers to share data across government agencies as well as across public and

    private sectors. This two-year collaborative project will begin to document and critically evaluate the

    information sharing practices of fusion centers. Specifically, the research will focus on variations in

    data sharing across fusion centers. The research questions are (1) What types of data sharing are

    occurring with or enabled by fusion centers? and (2) What factors contribute to the data-sharing

    practices of fusion centers? Using qualitative methods, research will be conducted through document

    analysis of government and media sources, observational studies at government-sponsored security

    conferences, and a minimum of 40 semi-structured interviews with representatives of government

    agencies, private companies, and civil society organizations. The merit of this project is its

    contribution to an understanding of the implications of new organizational and technological

    developments for the provision of national security. This study is theoretically valuable because it

    will contribute to scholarship on surveillance and society, the privatization of security, and the

    politics of technological systems. In addition to producing refereed articles and conference

    presentations, this research will provide an important empirical piece to a larger international

    project called The New Transparency, which is facilitating multi-national and cross-cultural

    comparisons of the global security industry. The broader impacts of this project include an increased

    awareness of the roles, contributions and implications of fusion centers.

    Funding: National Science Foundation.

  • 30

    Impact of Housing and Services Intervention on Homeless Families

    Beth Shinn, External Principal Investigator (in collaboration with Abt Associates,

    Internal Principal Investigator)

    This study is designed to understand what types of housing and service interventions for

    homeless families work best to promote families residential stability and self sufficiency, adult

    and child well-being, and family preservation. Researchers will randomly assign 2,400 homeless

    families across 12 cities to four types of housing and service interventions to develop rigorous

    answers to the question, What works best for what sorts of families?

    Funding: Department of Housing and Urban Development (in collaboration with Abt

    Associates, Inc.)

    Pending addition:

    The Effects of Homeless Interventions on Child Outcomes

    Beth Shinn, Principal Investigator, Velma McBride Murry, Lindsay Satterwhite

    This study is proposed to add a child component and a qualitative component to the HUD-funded

    study just described. We will interview children as well as mothers to understand child outcomes,

    and conduct qualitative interviews with a smaller sample of mothers to understand why families do

    not always take up housing options that policy makers believe should be attractive, how families

    make decisions, often among bad alternatives, about whether children will remain with parents, and

    how different interventions affect parenting.

    Funding pending: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (in collaboration

    with Abt Associates, Inc.)

    Fostering Capabilities for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness

    Jos Ornelas, Maria Vargas-Moniz, and Beth Shinn

    This study in collaboration with researchers from the Instituto Superior de Psicologia Aplicada and

    the Associao para o Estudo e Integrao Psicossocial in Lisbon Portugal attempts to understand

    and measure how social programs and community-based organizations promote social integration for

    individuals who experience mental illness. The work uses the capabilities framework pioneered by

    economist Amartya Sen and philosopher Martha Nussbaum to understand peoples freedom to plan

    their lives, undertake valued social roles and live life fully, despite disabilities. The research focuses

    on features of social settings that enhance or impede these freedoms or capabilities.

    Funding: European Union Funds applied for

    Effects of Housing Subsidies on Maternal and Child Well-Being

    Beth Shinn and Laurel Lunn

    This is a reanalysis of old data from as study of homeless families in New York, some of whom

    received housing subsidies after leaving shelter. Previous analyses showed that families who

    received subsidies were much more likely to attain residential stability. The current analyses ask

    whether the beneficial effects of stability extend to other outcomes.

    Identifying Families At Risk of Homelessness

    Beth Shinn and Andrew Greer

    This study examines data from the HomeBase homeless prevention programs in New York City to

    determine what characteristics of families applying for prevention services predict entry into shelter.

    The goal is to help New York City target its prevention services more effectively.

  • 31

    Contested terrains of rights: the rights based approach to gender and development and social justice

    philanthropy

    Brooke Ackerly, Principal Investigator

    Despite being a seemingly straight forward moral claim,

    human rights is a contested concept. In this project, I

    work through some of the contested terrain of human

    rights arguments, specifically, those associated with the

    rights-based approach to gender and development and

    to social change philanthropy. I argue that while this

    descriptor has been used to apply to a wide range of issue

    areas, the real contestation around the meaning of a

    rights-based approach to development and social change

    philanthropy is not in a debate about the meaning of

    rights. Rather a rights-based approach is assumed to be

    the appropriate and most legitimate approach to gender

    and development and to social change work.

    Consequently, the label is often claimed without the demands of such an approach fully understood.

    I conclude by clarifying the demands of a rights-based approach that is consistent with the

    womens human rights struggles (and theory of human rights) that led to its legitimacy

    Social determinants of obesity in a rural southwestern community.

    Teresa Sharp (University of Colorado - Denver), Principle Investigator, Elizabeth Gilbert

    (University of Northern Colorado),

    Educational Consultant: Sharon Shields

    (Vanderbilt University), Neal Palmer and Laurel

    Lunn (Vanderbilt University), Project

    Coordinators.

    Other Vanderbilt project members: Sarah

    Edmiston, Akua Hill, Julie Phenis, Courtney

    Williams (Vanderbilt Master's students);

    Veronica Calvin, Laura Shade (Vanderbilt

    undergraduate students)

    Abstract: Rates of obesity and diabetes in the United

    States are alarming, and these conditions

    disproportionately affect those already marginalized

    by race, class, geography, and other structural

    barriers. We conducted a mixed methods pilot study in a diverse rural southwestern community,

    which examined the social determinants of obesity associated with access to healthy foods and

    physical