body bg

Inform-Banner

Self-helping from the Hand That Feeds?: Evaluating the 'Deserving Community' Ethic of Governance in North East Tasmania

  • Year: 2006
  • Author: Godwin, Michelle; Pritchard, Bill
  • Journal Name: Rural Society
  • Journal Number: Vol. 16, No. 3
  • Country: Australia
  • State/Region: Tasmania

This paper critically evaluates the related concepts of the 'deserving community' and 'self-help' forms of governance that have underpinned the economic development initiatives of the Dorset local government area, North East Tasmania. Following the announced closure of a major food processing factory, this region implemented a regional development strategy based around stated principles of community selfhelp. The perceived success of this strategy led, in 2004, to Dorset winning a national regional development award. Inspired by recent research on regional 'showcasing' and the political construction of 'deserving communities', the paper problematises Dorset's enactment of the self-help model and its claims of success. As applied in Dorset, 'self-help' is buttressed heavily by the support of external actors. Yet despite these contradictions, the ethic of self-help resonates within hegemonic rural discourses and, accordingly, finds favor as an organising set of principles for local community action. As such, it is suggested that discourses of regional self-help provide a negotiating field through which rural communities facing difficult economic situations can simultaneously depend on, yet perceptually distance themselves from, government regional development assistance.

Related Items

Signs of Countrymindedness: A Survey of Attitudes to Rural Industries and People

Some political scientists have argued that 'countrymindedness', a set of tenets about the...

Living in the Regions 2013: A survey of attitudes and perceptions about living in regional Western Australia.

The purpose of the Living in the Regions 2013 survey was to ascertain what attracts people to the...

Rural Communities and Disaster Recovery

This paper examines the issues involved with enabling people living in rural and remote Australia...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us