Questioning Neoendogeneity: Cases of Community Economic Development Practice from Atlantic Canada

Authors

  • Tamara Antonia Krawchenko Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22230/cjnser.2016v7n2a202

Keywords:

Atlantic Canada, Community development, Economic development, Neoendogenous development, New rural paradigm / Canada atlantique, Développement communautaire, Développement économique, Développement néo-endogène, Nouveau paradigme rural

Abstract

Neoendogenous approaches to community economic development have risen to prominence in recent years. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has described such approaches as nothing less than “the new rural paradigm.” But is this paradigm reflected in practice? This research examines the community economic development landscape—from the perspectives of federal and provincial funders to that of community-based groups—through two Atlantic Canadian case studies (Marystown, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Montague, Prince Edward Island). Governmental funders are found to prioritize economic and business development objectives above social, cultural, and community-oriented ones. These preferences shape the types of projects that are funded and the community groups that propel them, undermining the adoption of truly neoendogenous, community-driven practices.

Dans les dernières années, les approches néo-endogènes envers le développement économique communautaire ont cru en importance. L’Organisation de coopération et de développement économiques (OECD) a décrit ces approches comme entraînant ni plus ni moins qu’un « nouveau paradigme rural ». Mais la pratique reflète-t-elle ce paradigme? Cette étude examine le contexte pour le développement communautaire économique—du point de vue des subventionneurs fédéraux et provinciaux et de celui des groupes communautaires—au moyen de deux études de cas menées dans deux villes des provinces de l’Atlantique (c’est-à-dire Marystown, Terre-Neuve et Labrador, et Montague, Île-du-Prince-Édouard). Il se trouve que les subventionneurs gouvernementaux donnent la priorité aux objectifs de développement économique et commercial aux dépens des objectifs sociaux, culturels et communautaires. Cette priorité a un impact sur les types de projets subventionnés et sur les groupes communautaires qui les appuient, entravant ainsi l’adoption de pratiques véritablement néo-endogènes dans les communautés.

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Author Biography

Tamara Antonia Krawchenko, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

I'm a public policy researcher and educator with a passion for governance. I’m interested in how societies collectively make decisions, allocate resources and structure authority and action. My work examines politics and policy at different scales—international, national and local—bridging qualitative and quantitative methods in the process. I'm committed to producing meaningful and useful policy research that has both theoretical and practical applications. I have taught courses in public policy/administration, political science and research methods. I am presently an economist/policy anlayst with the Governance and Territorial development division of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris.

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Published

2017-01-25

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