Fundamentos teóricos de la asociatividad para el diagnóstico de organizaciones locales

Associativity is a key strategy for organizational strengthening and territorial sustainability, particularly in contexts marked by structural exclusion, weak institutions, and community fragmentation. In Latin America, local organizations play a crucial role in managing collective goods, fostering...

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Autori principali: Alcivar-Soria, Evelyn Eugenia, Solano-Gutiérrez, Gerardo Alfredo, Gallegos-Montero, Ruth Isabel, Cabrera-Moreira, Joel David
Natura: Online
Lingua:spagnolo
Pubblicazione: Editorial Grupo AEA 2026
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Accesso online:https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/174374
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Riassunto:Associativity is a key strategy for organizational strengthening and territorial sustainability, particularly in contexts marked by structural exclusion, weak institutions, and community fragmentation. In Latin America, local organizations play a crucial role in managing collective goods, fostering citizen participation, and building alternatives to conventional development. However, their analysis reveals theoretical and methodological gaps that hinder the design of context-sensitive diagnostic tools. This study analyzes the theoretical foundations of associativity from an interdisciplinary and multilevel perspective. Through a narrative literature review, ten key authors and four conceptual clusters were identified: collective action and cooperation; social capital in its functions, risks, and structures; organizational governance; and the symbolic, territorial, and political dimension. Based on these clusters, a theoretical operationalization matrix was constructed, linking core concepts to diagnostic dimensions applicable to local associations. The findings provide a foundation for designing mixed-method instruments (quantitative and qualitative) to evaluate organizational performance in contexts such as La Concordia (Ecuador). The study concludes that associativity must be understood as a relational, institutional, and political process, closely connected to social reproduction and place-based development.