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The daughter of Billy and Ruth Graham, Anne Graham Lotz has just completed Heaven: My Father's House. Written in consideration of the events of September 11, the book examines concepts such as death, suicide, heaven and hell from a biblical perspective. Lotz is president and executive director of AnGel Ministries, a non-profit ministry organization that produces Just Give Me Jesus revivals across ...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/11/graham.lotz/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/11/graham.lotz/index.html

Bernard Haykel is an assistant professor of Islamic Studies at New York University. He recently provided CNN with an interpretation and analysis of the videotaped statement of Osama bin Laden released by his al Qaeda organization this weekend. In the analysis, Haykel addressed the possibility of hidden messages sent by way of bin Laden's speech and body language. The White House has since asked th...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/14/ret.haykel.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/14/ret.haykel.cnna/index.html

Daniel Solon is a senior consultant for Avmark International in London, a consultancy firm that specializes in commercial aviation. He is an associate editor of Avmark Aviation Economist, a monthly magazine that covers commercial aviation issues. He joined the CNN.com chat room from London.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/24/solon.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/24/solon.cnna/index.html

David Pence is the webmaster for TheLordoftheRings.com. He joined the CNN.com chat room from California to discuss New Line Cinema's recently released movie of J.R.R. Tolkein's The Lord of the Rings, and all things of Middle Earth.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/25/pence/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/25/pence/index.html

Dr. Joyce Brothers is considered the dean of American psychologists. A regular columnist for Good Housekeeping Magazine, Dr. Brothers' columns appear in more than 175 newspapers reaching 22 million readers worldwide. She also contributes to Parade and Reader's Digest, and is the author of ten books including How To Get Whatever You Want out of Life and Positive Plus: The Practical Plan for Liking ...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/10/brothers.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/10/brothers.cnna/index.html

Gloria Steinem is a writer and a champion of women's issues, including equal rights, equal pay, and abortion. In the early 1970s she co-founded the Women's Action Alliance to develop women's educational programs. She founded Ms. Magazine in 1972, a revolutionary publication that challenged mainstream thinking about women's places in society, and she is now chair of Liberty Media for Women, LLC, t...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/27/steinem.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/27/steinem.cnna/index.html

Imad Hamad is the Midwest Regional Director of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, which is considered the premier civil rights organization in the nation on behalf the Arab American community. Hamad was born as a Palestinian refugee in Lebanon and came to the U.S. as a student in 1980. Twelve years later he acquired his U.S. citizenship. He has been recognized by the U.S. Congress fo...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/06/hamad/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/06/hamad/index.html

James Steinberg served as Deputy National Security Adviser during the Clinton Administration. Now the head of Foreign Policy Studies at Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington, DC., Steinberg has held positions at the U.S. State Department, The Markle Foundation, the Rand Corporation and the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Steinberg served as national security counsel to ...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/24/steinberg/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/24/steinberg/index.html

James Steinberg is the head of Foreign Policy Studies at Brookings Institution, and the author of An Ever Closer Union: European Integration and Its Implications for the Future of U.S.-European Relations, and a CNN analyst. He served as Deputy National Security Adviser during the Clinton administration, and was national security counsel to Senator Edward Kennedy.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/03/steinberg/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/03/steinberg/index.html

James Steinberg served as Deputy National Security Adviser during the Clinton Administration. Now the head of Foreign Policy Studies at Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington, DC. Steinberg has held positions at the U.S. State Department, The Markle Foundation, the Rand Corporation and the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Steinberg served as national security counsel to ...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/17/steinberg/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/17/steinberg/index.html

Jonathan Karl is a CNN Capitol Hill correspondent.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/26/karl.otsc/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/26/karl.otsc/index.html

Jonathan Karl is a White House correspondent for CNN. He joined the CNN.com chat room from Washington, DC.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/05/karl.otsc/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/05/karl.otsc/index.html

Jonathan Karl is CNN's Congressional Correspondent. He joined CNN.com Newsroom from Washington.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/12/karl/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/12/karl/index.html

Jose Ramos-Horta is the foreign minister of East Timor, and co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize. South Pacific island of East Timor had been controlled by military forces from nearby Muslim-dominated Indonesia since 1975. During that time, about one-third of the East Timorese were killed by war, starvation and human rights abuses allegedly imposed by the Indonesian military. Ramos-Horta, as...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/10/ramos.horta.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/10/ramos.horta.cnna/index.html

J. Kelly McCann is President and CEO of Crucible Security Specialists of Falmouth, Va. A retired Marine Corps major, McCann was a special operations officer emphazing in anti-terrorism. His firm consults in the areas of antiterrorism and security. Its clients include the United States military and federal government, municipalities. Various members of the U.S. military's special operations forces ...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/18/mccann/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/18/mccann/index.html

Kelly Wallace is a CNN White House correspondent. She joined CNN.com chatroom from Washington, DC.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/14/wallace.otsc/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/14/wallace.otsc/index.html

Kelly Wallace is a CNN White House correspondent. She joined the CNN.com chat room from Washington.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/20/wallace.otsc/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/20/wallace.otsc/index.html

Omar Samad is the Executive Producer at the Azadi Afghan Radio and also a member of the Afghanistan Information Center
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/17/samad/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/17/samad/index.html

In March 1997, former CNN correspondent Peter Arnett became the first Western journalist to interview Osama bin Laden. Arnett's 40-year career as a war correspondent began in Vietnam covering the war for the Associated Press. He was awarded the Putlizer Prize in 1966. In 1981 he joined CNN as its first Moscow bureau chief. By 1991, Arnett achieve worldwide attention for his exclusive coverage of...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/05/gen.arnett.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/05/gen.arnett.cnna/index.html

Ambassador Peter Tomsen served in the first Bush Administration as the U.S. Special Envoy to Afghanistan from 1989 to 1992. In that role, he met with many of the Afghan tribal leaders and commanders who remain active today. In June 2001, he met with former Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah Masood, who was assassinated by the Taliban just before U.S. attacks were launched. Tomsen also met with th...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/12/ret.tomsen.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/12/ret.tomsen.cnna/index.html

Award-winning magazine journalist and author Sebastian Junger recently returned from Afghanistan where he traveled with members of the Afghan opposition. His latest book, Fire, is a collection of works ranging from his coverage of guerrilla warfare in Afghanistan, the diamond trade of Sierra Leon, and genocide in Kosovo, as well as other hot spots throughout the world. Junger is the author of the...
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/14/junger.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/14/junger.cnna/index.html

CNN Correspondent Susan Candiotti joins us from Washington, DC, where she's currently covering the Justice Department and the terrorist investigations.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/13/ret.candiotti.otsc/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/13/ret.candiotti.otsc/index.html

Tahmeena Faryal is a spokeswoman for the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, the oldest women's humanitarian and political organization in Afghanistan. She is currently touring the United States, raising money for RAWA and educating Americans about the plight of women in Afghanistan both under the Taliban and under the Northern Alliance.
http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/04/faryal.cnna/index.html

http://cnn.com/2001/COMMUNITY/12/04/faryal.cnna/index.html

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Wikipedia-Article "Community"

For other uses, see Community (disambiguation).


A community is an amalgamation of living things that share an environment. The individual living beings can be plant or animal; any species; any size. What characterizes a community is sharing interaction in many ways. In human communities, intent, belief, resources, preferences, needs and a multitude of other conditions may be present and common, affecting the degree of adhesion within the mixture, but the definitive driver of community is that all individual subjects in the mix have something in common. This is even true in biological communities.

Contents

The nature of community

In biological terms, natural communities are formed based upon relationships. Whether surviving in salt water, fresh water or atop a geological substrate, living things of common species are attracted to each other, at least long enough to procreate, or the species would be no more. More often than not, communities of animal species obey a built-in mandate to gather together. The rules of community that are found in nature have preserved life on this planet to this day and will most likely stay in place for some time to come.

The context of community

From the days of the hunter-gatherer culture, individual humans have learned that there is strength in numbers and that sharing work and resources can be a good thing. The Latin root munus or gift, brings into the meaning of community the aspect of giving of one's self to others. Related etymology for munere expands the meaning to included something prized, precious and worth defending. It is the same root as used for the word munitions (defences). Sharing in this "common defence" incorporates a balance between self-interest and shared-interests within and among members of a group and is a crucial factor in community formation. When enough participants in a group develop an attitude of caring for the well-being of the whole, or the common good, the prospect of community is present.

Whatever drives people to cooperate and collaborate in the first place, is not quite as important in the context of community as what makes them continue to associate. Resilient connections between and among people are what is important in the formation of viable communities. Successful efforts by a mix of participants tend to attract the attention of other less connected individuals who may seek to join the group that is succeeding. This tendency, akin to herd behavior in animals, is called Self-organization.

Over time, some parts of humanity have progressed steadily toward more complex forms of organization and control. Hunter/gatherer tribes settled around seasonal foodstocks to become agrarian villages. Villages grew to become towns and cities. Cities turned into city-states and nation-states. The fact that commerce, industry, government and human institutions become ever larger and more complex suggests that humans, particularly those who are conversant with the rules that drive these complexes are themselves driven toward aggregation, amalgamation, and consolidation. When this increase in social capital reaches critical mass, innovations in social networks can begin to work toward a higher context through an inescapable cultural awareness of others. This phenomenon is generally called the emergence of collective consciousness.

The processes of community

It can be intuitively reasoned through subjective experience that we've all shared, regardless of culture, class, religion or any other determinant, that we grow to learn who we are chiefly through contact with others. This is a progressive development which is as universal in Human experience as any single sociological component can be - the process of identification. A human being is born with a mind and a set of inherited traits. Without going into the argument of heredity with environment, it is reasonable to accept that the habits and behaviors that a person grows into are largely a function of the community group behaviors that prevailed through that process. That is the first process of community.

As an individual grows into an adult another process occurs. That being a progressive accumulation of facts, truths, and hopefully insights which all move together through the process of realization. It is during plateaus reached along this progression that cognitive structures are formed, attitudes toward the local world, the society viewable from within personal scope, and an understanding of how people relate one to the other and within the context of community. This process is called socialization.

So, identification, realization and socialization brings an individual into a position of making choices about who he or she will socialize with and under what conditions and circumstances. From the perspective of the individual, selecting or deselecting groups to join is yet another process - the process of association. When associated individuals develop the intent to give of themselves to the group and maintain all of the processes from identification to association they begin to bring into practice the first process of true community - the process of communication.

Problems of community

As communities form, so usually develops a collective consciousness and a set of mores. These serve to add cohesion, harmony and continuity to a group, allowing it to grow, sometimes to a gargantuan size. Once a critical mass of people adopts a set of mores and develops a collective consciousness it becomes a society. Participation is no longer optional for the individual. Behavior is now a function of being required or compelled to conform to the norm rather than choosing to give of one's self. This condition is sometimes thought of as the status quo.

A natural outgrowth of stagnant societies and large organizations is an increased propensity in individuals and factions to deviate from the norm. When enough individuals and factions decide that deviation can be a good thing, a new community can form as a subculture within the society. This can be good for the society by creating dynamics that enhance the social experiences and improve the well-being of the whole. A moderate form of this occurrence is called a social movement, while a radical form is called a revolution.

Individuals and factions can decide to form alliances intent on repressing deviation, eliminating or containing subcultures, enforcing the status quo or even oppressing or destroying the parts of the society that do not suit them or fit into their idea of what the society as a whole is to represent.

In both tiny communities and massive societies, problematic conditions arise involving the emergence of leaders. Leadership is a civic phenomenon that may introduce a high level of hierarchy. The structure of this hierarchy plays a key role in determining the characteristics of the whole. The community will effectively present to the larger world this collective personality.

The sense of community

Continuity of the connections between leaders and leaders, leaders and followers, followers and followers is vital to the strength of a community. Members, both leaders and followers, individually hold the collective personality of the whole. With sustained connections and continued conversations, participants in communities, regardless of degrees of inclusion, develop emotional bonds, intellectual pathways, enhanced linguistic abilities, and even a higher capacity for critical thinking and problem-solving. It could be argued that successive and sustained contact with other humans might help to remove some of the tensions of isolation, due to disenfranchisement, thus opening creative avenues that would have otherwise remained impassable.

Conversely, sustained involvement in tight communities might tend to aggravate tensions in some individuals. But, in many cases, it is easy enough to distance one's self from the "hive" temporarily to ease this stress. In fact, psychological maturity and effective communication skills may well be a function of this ability. In nearly every context, individual and collective behaviours are required to find a balance between inclusion and exclusion; for the individual - a matter of choice; for the group - a matter of charter. The sum of the creative energy and the strength of the mechanisms that maintain this balance is manifest as an observable and resilient sense of community.

The spirit of community

If the sense of community exists, both freedom and security exist as well. The Community then takes on a life of its own, as people become free enough to share and secure enough to get along. This is the spirit of community.

See also

External Links

This article is based on the article "Community" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.