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|Right Class=Community
|Formulation Text=A community can consist of other communities.
|Formulation File=Community Aggregation (Overgaard-2017).png
|Association Type=Aggregation
|Association Direction=Right-to-Left
|Left Multiplicity=
|Right Multiplicity=0..*
|Description=A When dealing with a community, it might be useful to analyze it in terms of its constituent subcommunities (e.g. the community of particle physicists within the community of physicists). But such an analysis is based on an assumption that a community can consist of other communities, i.e. subcommunities. This assumption is by no means trivial; indeed, there might exist a view that each community is to be treated separately as one indivisible whole and, thus, any talk of its constituents is meaningless. According to Overgaard, communities can be said to be consisting of other communities.[[CiteRef::Overgaard (2017)|p. 58]] Thus, there is such a thing as a sub-communitysubcommunity, i.e. a community that is part of a larger community (e.g. the community of particle physicists within the community of physicists).
|Resource=Overgaard (2017)
|Prehistory=
|History=
|Page Status=StubNeeds Editing
|Editor Notes=
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