Institutional partnerships benefit from formal structures, resource-sharing mechanisms, and accountability frameworks, while community partnerships benefit from participatory approaches, capacity building, and community ownership models. The paper demonstrates that successful partnerships addressing vulnerable populations must center equity, embrace intersectionality, and maintain a long-term sustainability focus. It also shows that partnerships that combine institutional resources with community wisdom and lived experience produce the most significant and lasting impacts for the vulnerable population. The paper concludes with case studies and practical examples. The basic principles identified for sustainable strategies are: shared power and decision-making, trust building, shared vision development, cultural harmony, mutual benefit, sustainability planning, and commitment to multiple learning, which provide important guidance for partnership development across different contexts and populations.
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