HUD and PD&R Publications
 
My Cart   |  HUD Home  |  HUD USER Home
Search   Advanced Search
 
First time visitor
Contact Us
FAQ
 
 
Series of images depicting different types of housing.
An animated link to the Map gallery


Firstgov logo



 
Start of Main Content

Hope VI: Community Building Makes a Difference (February 2000, 96 p.)

Send URL to FriendSend this to a friend
ORDER

Executive Summary:
* HTML (*.html)
* PDF (*.pdf)

Representing the most dramatic change in public housing in the last 60 years, the Hope VI program is transforming the Nation's most distressed public housing projects. A report released by HUD, Hope VI: Community Building Makes a Difference, examines the best practices that have emerged from the community-building and supportive services side of Hope VI. The book is filled with many useful--and sometimes sobering--lessons learned, detailed examples, and practical tips on making such programs work.

Hope VI: Community Building Makes a Difference primarily addresses the people side of the program--the supportive services and community--building efforts taking place in cities across the country. The report describes how housing authorities, residents, and community partners are working together to build community and highlights seven Hope VI sites where the community-building approach-fighting poverty by building social and human capital-is succeeding. Profiles of these seven sites incorporate material from onsite interviews with housing authority executives, staff, residents, and community partners. The profiles demonstrate varied and individualized approaches.

The book is not simply a brief analysis of the seven profiles but cuts across all of the experiences and examples to understand their broader implications for policy development. The report summarizes the general lessons learned and discusses a number of important lessons that also emerge in four specific areas of activity:

  • Providing opportunity for employment.
  • Providing opportunity for education.
  • Meeting the needs of families.
  • Engaging residents in the life and prospects of the community.

The most valuable lesson in the book is that there is no cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all approach to achieving success. As made clear by the profiles, many different approaches are possible and desirable.



spacer

Content updated on 03/31/05   Back to Top Back to Top
 If you do not have the Adobe Acrobat Reader program already installed on your computer to view PDF files, CLICK HERE to download the free reader.
HUD logo HUD USER, P.O. Box 23268, Washington, DC 20026-3268
Toll Free: 1-800-245-2691 TDD: 1-800-927-7589
Local: 1-202-708-3178 Fax: 1-202-708-9981
Home Icon
HUD USER Home
Privacy Statement