Abstract
In this document, I suggest that Community research and intervention must go beyond conceptions based on chimeric models of community, defined as the group of people who share territory, history, customs, and interests. From an analytic-comparative perspective, the roots of the concept of community are explored, showing the heuristic capacity to think of it as a model of social relationship and intersubjective action. A structuralist approach is proposed for the understanding of all psychic, social, symbolic, and material relations; determinants for the functioning and reproduction of the community and therefore, determine the field of action for Community intervention projects.
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