University-Community Engagement: What does it mean?

Main Article Content

Jenny Onyx

Abstract

This article reflects on the nature of Community-University engagement from a research focus. This entails several steps. In this I start with ‘engagement’ and what that might mean in the context of a University-based research centre. I then reflect on the nature of ‘community’ and the significance of the third sector globally and in Australia. The Centre for Australian Community Organisations and Management (CACOM) was the first research centre in Australia, and one of the first in the world designed explicitly to study the Community Sector and its impact. The article outlines one significant research program that emerged from the work of CACOM, namely the story of social capital research. This research was initiated by a request from community partners, and was carried out in collaboration with them. The research program led to several significant research projects which have had a major impact on theory and public policy. It challenges the nature of the University as ‘expert’ and illustrates the co-production of knowledge. The article concludes by discussing the various roles that the University can play within the co-production of research knowledge with the community, as collaborator in the research process itself, as mediator in the development of linking social capital between community and more powerful players, and as the potential site for independent and critical analysis.

Article Details

Section
Research articles (Refereed)
Author Biography

Jenny Onyx, UTS

Jenny Onyx (PhD) is Professor of Community Management in the School of Management at University Technology Sydney (UTS), Co-Director of Cosmopolitan Civil Societies, and former Editor of Third Sector Review. She is particularly concerned with issues of advocacy, social capital, and civil society and has published widely in these fields, with over 100 publications.