Economic, Social, Political, and Geographical Effects on Community
The experience of community is not just shaped by individual choice or interpersonal dynamics — it is profoundly influenced by structural forces: economic conditions, social norms, political decisions, and geographical characteristics. These factors shape who can participate in community, how communities are resourced, and how connected or isolated people feel.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Community experience is structured by forces beyond individual control. The sociological imagination requires that we connect individuals’ sense of belonging (or isolation) to the structural conditions — economic, social, political, and geographical — that shape their circumstances.
Economic Factors
- Economic prosperity provides resources for community infrastructure (community centres, sporting facilities, cultural organisations)
- Employment and economic security give people time, energy, and financial capacity to participate in community activities
- Economic development in regional areas can sustain communities that might otherwise depopulate
- Poverty and economic disadvantage: people experiencing financial stress have less capacity to participate in community activities (membership fees, travel costs, time pressure from multiple jobs)
- Gentrification: rising property prices in urban areas displace existing communities; long-term residents are priced out; community ties are severed
- Economic inequality: stratified communities where wealth differences are large may experience reduced social cohesion; Robert Putnam’s research links inequality to reduced social capital
- Rural economic decline: closure of industries (mining, farming, manufacturing) leads to depopulation of regional communities; remaining residents lose community institutions (hospitals, schools, businesses)
APPLICATION: The closure of the Hazelwood coal plant in the Latrobe Valley (2017) illustrates how economic change can devastate community — job losses, population decline, and loss of identity that had been built around the industry.
Social Factors
- Strong social norms of civic participation, volunteering, and mutual aid support community life
- Cultural practices that bring people together (sport, festivals, shared meals, ceremonies) generate social capital
- High social trust (the belief that others can be relied upon) enables community cooperation
- Social isolation and loneliness: growing rates of social isolation, particularly among elderly Australians, represent a significant social problem
- Social stratification: class, gender, and ethnicity shape participation — those from disadvantaged backgrounds may be excluded from community institutions that are oriented toward the dominant group
- Discrimination: social norms that exclude women, LGBTQ+ people, ethnic minorities, or people with disabilities from full community participation
Political Factors
- Government investment in community infrastructure (libraries, parks, community centres, sporting facilities) supports community experience
- Social policies (welfare support, community health services, disability services) provide resources that enable participation
- Multicultural policies signal that diverse communities are valued
- Political neglect: underfunding of rural and remote community services reduces quality of community life
- Asylum seeker and refugee policies: temporary visas and detention prevent genuine community formation for some of Australia’s most vulnerable people
- Institutional racism: political and government institutions that fail to respond equitably to the needs of Indigenous or ethnic minority communities undermine their members’ sense of belonging
Geographical Characteristics
- Proximity: physically close communities (dense urban neighbourhoods, small towns) enable frequent informal interaction — the basis of Gemeinschaft
- Shared natural environment: attachment to place (Country, landscape, local geography) is a powerful source of community identity — especially for Indigenous Australians and rural communities
- Distance and remoteness: geographical isolation makes participation in community activities difficult; remote Indigenous communities face barriers to services, healthcare, and education
- Urban sprawl: car-dependent, low-density suburban development reduces walkable public spaces and opportunities for informal interaction
- Natural disasters: floods, fires, droughts can destroy community infrastructure; but they can also produce intense, temporary community solidarity (“mateship” in disaster response)
| Factor |
Community Enabling Example |
Community Preventing Example |
| Economic |
Economic prosperity, resources for infrastructure |
Gentrification; rural decline; poverty |
| Social |
High social trust; volunteering culture |
Social isolation; discrimination |
| Political |
Investment in community services |
Political neglect; exclusionary immigration policy |
| Geographical |
Proximity; place attachment |
Remoteness; urban sprawl |
VCAA FOCUS: This KK requires analysis of all four factors. In an extended response, you do not need to give equal weight to each, but you should address at least two and show how they interact. Geographical isolation, for instance, is often compounded by economic disadvantage and political neglect (as in many remote Indigenous communities).