Active Involved Community Partnerships (AICP)
From Boothroyd et al. (2017), this term applies to processes that enhance effective local implementation success. Partnership processes benefitting key stakeholders focus on and include: active and involved listening and relationship building, addressing system barriers, establishing culturally relevant systems and supports, ensuring meaningful local involvement in implementation support activities, and ongoing communications / feedback for continuous learning and quality improvement. AICP’s help to ensure and support agency administrative, day-to-day and cross-agency functions in service to effective implementation teaming.
Boothroyd, R. I., Flint, A. Lapiz, A. M., Lyons, S., Lofts Jarboe, K., & Aldridge, W.A., II (2017). Active involved community partnerships: Co-Creating implementation infrastructure for getting to and sustaining social impact. Translational Behavioral Medicine, advanced online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13142-017-0503-3