For "civic engagement" work to have meaningful and log-term impact upon students, partners, and postsecondary institutions, each institution must undertake the difficult work of defining civic engagement for itself such that the definition aligns with the institution's educational mission and local context. The authors argue that civic engagement is inherently political and that definitional dilemmas have arisen from the conflation of the terms "service-learning" and "civic engagement." Here they present lessons they have learned from using service-learning to teach citizenship and applying essentially political definitions about community and how citizens should behave, and offer insights from an extended community-building project that they analyze for its revelations concerning universities' and communities' limited capacities for undertaking long-term civic engagement projects. They conclude by placing the problem of definition in a broader context of issues regarding cost and other limitations universities still need to consider to achieve and sustain civic engagement. [authors]

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