Descriptor
Source
| Community Development Journal | 7 |
Author
| Adejunmobi, A. | 1 |
| Akande, M. | 1 |
| Barrett, Hazel R. | 1 |
| Browne, Angela W. | 1 |
| Chamala, S. | 1 |
| Johnston, Mary | 1 |
| Madu, Ephraim N. | 1 |
| Martinez-Brawley, Emilia E. | 1 |
| Martwanna, N. | 1 |
| Umebali, Emmanuel E. | 1 |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 7 |
| Reports - Research | 7 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
| Nigeria | 3 |
| Gambia | 1 |
| Thailand | 1 |
| United Kingdom | 1 |
| United States | 1 |
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Peer reviewedMartinez-Brawley, Emilia E. – Community Development Journal, 1981
A study was conducted to determine whether the tenets of rural social work were applicable only to the developing countries or whether they were also meaningful in the context of other industrial nations of the West. (CT)
Descriptors: Community Organizations, Political Influences, Rural Development, Social Change
Peer reviewedBarrett, Hazel R.; Browne, Angela W. – Community Development Journal, 1994
Introduction of cereal mills in Gambian villages affected the lives of women and their communities in terms of women's access to the technology, the time and energy it saves, its sustainability, and their level of control. The energy saved enabled greater participation in the community, but they were still constrained by illiteracy and poverty.…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Females, Foreign Countries, Rural Areas
Peer reviewedMartwanna, N.; Chamala, S. – Community Development Journal, 1991
Although the content model based on behaviorism and the process model based on humanism can both be used in training, a case study of training rural development workers in Thailand shows advantages of the process model. The model is based on similar principles to rural development and on adult learning principles. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Behaviorism, Developing Nations, Extension Agents
Peer reviewedAkande, M. – Community Development Journal, 1992
The Isoya Rural Development Project appears to have enhanced Nigerian women's multiple roles (maternal, occupational, conjugal, domestic, kin, community, and individual). Limitations of the project include poor rural infrastructure, male-oriented cultural norms, and lack of direct access to land by women. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Economic Development, Females, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedMadu, Ephraim N.; Umebali, Emmanuel E. – Community Development Journal, 1993
A survey of 23 chairpersons of town unions (rural sociocultural organizations) in Nigeria indicated that self-help projects in education and rural development were concentrated in areas lacking infrastructure. Recommendations were made for an organizing framework, leadership training, government assistance, and efforts to encourage active…
Descriptors: Community Development, Community Organizations, Cooperatives, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedJohnston, Mary – Community Development Journal, 1990
An effort to introduce the plow to Timor farmers faced following barriers: nature of the land and climate, strongly demarcated traditional system, tensions among ethnic groups, cattlelords system, necessary time to place/retain trainers in villages. Positive factors were concrete results, use of small groups and native trainers, age of adopters,…
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Agricultural Production, Appropriate Technology, Farmers
Peer reviewedAdejunmobi, A. – Community Development Journal, 1990
A study of three Nigerian villages produced the following suggestions for improving the problems facing rural community development: democratic participative decision making, care in project selection, government incentives, promotion of adult literacy, and well-trained community workers. (SK)
Descriptors: Community Development, Developing Nations, Foreign Countries, Participative Decision Making


