American Journal of Community Psychology, volume 35, issue 3-4, pages 107-126
Toward a Comprehensive Strategy for Effective Practitioner-Scientist Partnerships and Larger-Scale Community Health and Well-Being
Richard Spoth
1, 2
,
Mark Greenberg
3
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2005-06-01
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.287
CiteScore: 6.3
Impact factor: 3.4
ISSN: 00910562, 15732770
PubMed ID:
15909789
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Health (social science)
Applied Psychology
Abstract
This article articulates joint priorities for the fields of prevention science and community psychology. These priorities are intended to address issues raised by the frequent observation of natural tensions between community practitioners and scientists. The first priority is to expand the knowledge base on practitioner-scientist partnerships, particularly on factors associated with positive outcomes within communities. To further articulate this priority, the paper first discusses the rapid growth in community-based partnerships and the emergent research on them. Next described is an illustrative research project on a partnership model that links state university extension and public school delivery systems. The article then turns to the second, related priority of future capacity-building for diffusion of effective partnership-based interventions to achieve larger-scale health and well-being across communities. It outlines two salient tasks: clarification of a conceptual framework and the formulation of a comprehensive capacity-building strategy for diffusion. The comprehensive strategy would require careful attention to the expansion of networks of effective partnerships, partnership-based research agendas, and requisite policy-making.
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