Biology:Outline of community

From HandWiki
Short description: Overview of and topical guide to community


The following outline is provided as an overview of topics relating to community.

A community is a group of people whose identity as a group lies in their interaction and sharing. Many factors may affect the identity of the participants and their degree of adhesion, such as intent, belief, resources, preferences, needs and risks.


Types of communities

Geographic and physical communities

Human geography – who people are and where they live

  • European Community – founded on March 25, 1957, by the signing of the Treaty of Rome
  • Community council – tier of local government in Wales and Scotland
  • Autonomous communities of Spain – Spain's fifty provinces are grouped into seventeen autonomous communities
  • Communities, regions and language areas of Belgium
  • Local community – town, city, neighborhood, rural area, or any locale and everyone in it
  • Unincorporated community – geographic area having a common social identity
  • Residential community – small town or city, composed mostly of residents
  • Intentional Community – planned residential community, usually of people that share personal and cultural values.
    • Cohousing – intentional community composed of private homes centered around a common house and other common facilities.
    • Ecovillage – intentional community formed with social, economic, and ecological sustainability as its goal.
    • Commune (intentional community) – intentional community where most resources are shared and there is little or no personal property (as opposed to communities that only share housing)
    • Monastery – community of monks practicing a religious discipline
    • Convent – community of clergy particularly in the Roman Catholic Church and, to a lesser degree, in the Anglican Church
    • World Brotherhood Colonies – idea for spiritual based intentional communities based on shared spiritual principles, begun by Paramahansa Yogananda

Global community

  • World community – global aspects of community from the perspective of governance and the humanities
  • International community – global aspects of community from the perspective of governance and the humanities
  • Global village – global aspects of community from the perspective of telecommunications

Ideational or abstract communities

  • Business community – total body of business people its relationships and interactions
  • Religious congregation – total body of religious people its relationships and interactions
  • intentional community – total body of religious people its relationships and interactions
  • Scientific community – total body of scientists, its relationships and interactions
  • Epistemic community – those who accept one version of a story
  • Discourse Community – users of a particular style of language
  • Moral community – group of people drawn together by a common interest in living according to a particular moral philosophy
  • Voluntary association – group of individuals who voluntarily enter into an agreement to accomplish a purpose
  • Cooperative – group of persons who join (co-operate) to carry on an economic activity of mutual benefit

Associative communities

Community of...

  • Action – group of people organized to support a cause or bring about social change
  • Circumstance – group of people bound together because of circumstances usually beyond their control
  • Interest – group of people who share a common interest or passion
  • Place – group of people bound together because of where they spend a continuous portion of their time
  • Position – group of people who share a particular station in life (such as teenage years, marriage, parenthood, etc.)
  • Practice – group of people who choose to collaborate over an extended period to share ideas, find solutions, and build innovations.
  • Purpose – group of people who are going through the same process or are trying to achieve a similar objective

see Group (sociology)

Cooperatives

  • Housing cooperative – legal entity that owns real estate, usually one or more residential buildings
  • Retailers' cooperative – network of retailers which employs economies of scale to get discounts from manufacturers and to pool marketing
  • Consumers' cooperative – cooperative which employs economies of scale to get discounts from distributors
  • Utility cooperative – public utility such as electric, water or telecommunications owned by its members
  • Worker cooperative – business entity owned in part or exclusively by its workers

Other

  • Affinity group – small group of activists (usually from 3-20) who work together on direct action
  • Intentional community – planned residential community with a much higher degree of social interaction than other communities
  • Learning community – cohort-based, interdisciplinary approach to higher education covering distinct fields of study
  • Virtual communitySee Virtual community section below
  • Web community

Actual communities

Lists of communities, co-ops, etc.:

  • Intentional communities
  • Cooperatives

Lists of virtual communities:

The world community:

Note to dialup users: the following lists are massive

  • List of countries (a comprehensive list of List of sovereign states)
  • List of subnational entities (a comprehensive list of subnational entities, such as states, provinces, communities, etc.)

Online communities

Community concepts, movements and schools of thought

  • Affinity (sociology) – in terms of sociology, refers to "kinship of spirit", interest and other interpersonal commonalities
  • Cenobitic – monastic tradition that stresses community life as opposed to eremitic (like a hermit).
  • Collective – group of people who share common interests, working together to achieve a common objective
  • Collectivism – school of thought, antithetical to Individualism, in which the collective takes precedence over the individual
  • Communitarianism – group of related but distinct philosophies advocating phenomena such as civil society
  • Communitas – Latin noun for the spirit of community having significance in cultural anthropology and the social sciences.
  • Community politics – movement in British politics to re-engage people with political action on a local level
  • Community television – television stations that are owned and operated by communities rather than governments or corporations
  • Consanguinity – quality of being descended from the same ancestor as another person
  • Consensus decision-making – inclusive decision-making processes that accommodate even the minority
  • Emergence – complex pattern formation from simpler rules
  • Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft – terms introduced by German sociologist Ferdinand Tönnies to distinguish community from society
  • Group (sociology) – collection of people who share characteristics, interact and have a common identity
  • Group dynamics – field of study within the social sciences that focuses on the nature of groups
  • Imagined communities – concept that nations are socially constructed by the imaginations of people
  • Internationalism (politics) – political movement which advocates cooperation between nations for the benefit of all
  • Interpersonal relationship – connection, affiliation or association between two or more people
  • Liminality – period of transition related to initiation, rite of passage or other entry into a group
  • Meeting – two or more people coming together to have discussions or produce a predetermined output, often in a formalized way
  • Meritocracy – form of government based on rule by ability (merit) rather than by wealth or other determinants of social position.
  • Organization – formal group of people with one or more shared goals
  • Organizational learning – area of knowledge that looks at how an organization learns and adapts
  • Plenary session – part of a meeting when all members of all parties are in attendance
  • Scientific Community Metaphor – approach in computer science to understanding and performing scientific communities
  • Sense of community – look from the psychological perspective at how and why communities form and why people join them
  • Small-group communication – communication in a context that mixes interpersonal communication interactions with social clustering
  • Social capital – concept with a variety of inter-related definitions, based on the economic value of social networks
  • Socialization – process by which people learn to adopt the behavior patterns of the community in which they live
  • Solidarity (sociology) – feeling or condition of unity based on common goals, interests, and sympathies among a group's members

Academic subjects

Community development

Community development – efforts to improve communities:

Virtual community concepts

Virtual community Virtual community – group of people communicating with each other by means of information technologies:

See also Category:Virtual communities

Other community topics

  • Global Ecovillage Network – global association of people and communities (ecovillages) dedicated to living "sustainable plus" lives
  • Communication – process of sending information to oneself or another entity – usually via a language
  • Gathering place – phenomenal natural location crucial to culture and civilization
  • Community Boards – community-based mediation program, established in 1976, in San Francisco, California – USA
  • Community garden – small plots of land allocated to groups of people by some organization for collective gardening
  • WELL – (Whole Earth Lectronic Link or The WELL) - one of the oldest virtual communities still online.
  • The Farm (Tennessee) – spiritual intentional community in Summertown, Tennessee – known informally as a hippie commune

Community institutions

  • Community college – educational institution providing post-secondary education
  • Community foundations – institutions that pool donations into coordinated investments for grants
  • Community (trade union) – trade union in the UK

See also

Other uses of the term "community"
  • Community: A NewOrderOnline Tribute, a tribute album (music recording)
  • Biological community, all the interacting organisms living together in a specific habitat

Resources

See: List of community topics: Resources

External links