Abstract
This study explores the ways in which neighbourhood residents, voluntary and professional workers perceive the `health' of their community. Participants were invited to comment on factors affecting health and to identify health-related projects that had been particularly successful or unsuccessful. Negative influences on health were identified more readily than positive influences. Perceived threats to health appeared to offer the most likely locus for collective action, but were unlikely to appear on the official agenda of local health and council organizations. The diversity of `local voices' has implications for the concept of `community as partner' in public health and urban regeneration initiatives.
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