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Community Development Journal Advance Access originally published online on November 22, 2006
Community Development Journal 2008 43(1):79-92; doi:10.1093/cdj/bsl042
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© Oxford University Press and Community Development Journal. 2007 All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Religion, ethnicity, and community mental health: service provision and identity politics in an unplanned Egyptian community

Elizabeth M. Coker

Address for correspondence: Department of Sociology, Anthropology, Psychology and Egyptology, the American University in Cairo, 113 Sharia Kasr el Aini, P.O. Box 2511 11511 Cairo, Egypt; email: emcoker{at}aucegypt.edu

Successful community mental health programs depend on strong social networks and cooperation between resource providers, both of which are complex products of local culture and history. The results of an ethnographic study of an unplanned urban neighborhood in Cairo, Egypt emphasize the importance of the political, social and historical context to community service development. The informal nature of the community, characterized by migrants from different ethnic and religious groups and a relative lack of governmental services, produced a culture of service provision that indirectly serves to accentuate religious and ethnic tensions. The findings are relevant not only to the developing world, but also to community program development in large, multicultural urban centers anywhere.


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