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Gone relationship building...

by Ellen Tveit, 8/5/08 • Tonight (August 5), people in thousands of communities around the United States will gather on the street with their neighbors. While some are raising questions about the compensation of the founder of National Night Out – and even rejecting the organizational name in protest – the idea behind the annual event is hard to quibble with: getting to know your neighbors can help reduce crime.

By the People is a weblog on civic engagement produced by the Center for Democracy and Citizenship at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs of the University of Minnesota.


On my block in a working class neighborhood in St. Paul, Minn., National Night Out is a rare occasion for some of us (me included) to do more than wave or call out a non-committal hello. We need a space – temporal, psychological and physical – to initiate and tend to relationships with the people around us. (Lots has been written about why this is important and how we can make it happen. The nonprofit organization Project for Public Spaces is a good resource.)

Having relationships with the people around us is important for more than reducing crime, of course. Building those relationships gives us practice negotiating differences in self-interest, in political affiliation, in age, in approaches to lawn maintenance – even in the most homogeneous neighborhood there will be differences to bridge. And being able to bridge differences is essential to working together for the good of all of us, whether it’s at the block level, with our local government, or on a national scale.

Sound Pollyanna-ish? Maybe. But true? Absolutely.

What is your experience with National Night Out? With building relationships with neighbors? Share with other readers of this blog by posting a comment.

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Pooker's picture

Neighborhood night out

I was pleasantly surprised by my experience at NNO. I thought it was going to be a more extended version of the half hearted wave I give to my neighbors when I cross paths with them. On the contrary I was able to put personal faces to the impersonal houses. Really a great and simple way to get to know the people that you live next to and may have to count on some day (or vice-versa).

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