Notes on Community Development page:

- direct quotes have citation directly after

- other words are available as links to see their wikipedia pages

- history can be biased, it's very general and not positive what point of view it comes from unless checking references

- interpretations of different countries

- not as much information provided for global south, so maybe slightly biased for global north

- seems all references work

- mostly neutral

- may be a little out of date, wikipedia notes the article requires cleanup

- community ensures the article isn't biased and aims to providing the facts they can find

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Comparison to Refugee Women's Network:

- shorter and much less information available

- only a couple general sentences available on the topic itself

- provides history as well

- wikipedia notes the article has multiple issues

- not all references work

- little to no discussion on the talk page

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Critique Mobile Home Construction and Safety Standards Act of 1974:

- only three references, two worked but the last was from the U.S. Census Bureau that said they were performing maintenance on the site, so not positive if it actually works; other two references from U.S. Bureau of Statistics

- all references reliable

- everything is relevant to the topic

- very standard, neutral information, not biased

- nothing on the talk page

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Collective Benefits Article

- A collective benefit often benefits more than one person at the cost of an individual acting to obtain the benefit.[1]

- It is common that an individual may benefit from a collective act without contributing to it. [1]

- Collective benefits can non-competitive and inclusive if the availability of the benefit does not diminish from the use of one actor. [2] An example of this type of collective benefit is social capital.[2]

- However, they can also be exclusive if the benefit is not available to all networks of relation, such as a pure public good. [2]

  1. ^ a b Kappeler, Peter M. (2000-05-04). Primate Males: Causes and Consequences of Variation in Group Composition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521658461.
  2. ^ a b c Walter, Jorge; Lechner, Christoph; Kellermanns, Franz W. (July 2007). "Knowledge transfer between and within alliance partners: Private versus collective benefits of social capital". Journal of Business Research. 60 (7): 698–710. doi:10.1016/j.jbusres.2007.01.026.