Social Capital – Flashcards
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Social Capital Definition
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The networks of relationships among people who live and work in a particular society, enabling that society to function effectively.
Social capital can be found in friendship networks, churches, schools, clubs, civic associations, and even bars.
The motto of Cheers "where everybody knows your name" captures one important aspect of social capital
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Examples of Social Capital
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Examples would be:
When a group of neighbors keep an eye on one another's homes (community watch)
Barn raising on a frontier
E-mail exchanges among members of a cancer support group
Civic engagement
Social connectedness
Produce such results far as better schools, faster economic development, lower crime, and more effective government
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Dimensions of Social Capital
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There are three dimensions of social capital: structural, relational and cognitive
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Structural
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The structural dimension is:
The properties of the network itself
Refers to the pattern of how things are connected
Who and how they reach people for resources
The size, location, diversity, and closeness of ties within the network can make it easier or more difficult to access relationships and consequently, affect the amount of social capital one has available to exchange for needed resources.
The picture shows the sub-dimensions within the structural dimension.
-The bonding social capital is the connection within a network
-The bridging social capital it the connection between two networks
-The linking social capital is the connection between a network and the government
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Relational
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Based on characteristics of social relationships between individuals and is commonly described as including trust and trustworthiness
Relational dimension is known as interpersonal relationships
Interpersonal relationships are social associations, connections, or affiliations between two or more people. They vary in differing levels of intimacy and sharing, implying the discovery or establishment of common ground, and may be centered around something(s) shared in common.
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Cognitive
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Shared norms, values, attitudes and beliefs
Predisposes people towards mutually beneficial collective action
Refers to resources that provide shared representation, interpretations, and systems of meaning among parties
Examples would be:
Separate networks or communities that develop unique terms, acronyms, interpretation of numbers and concepts
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Putnam- Why U.S. Social Capital is Eroding
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Three Countertrends that Putnam emphasized in his article "Bowling Alone"
Tertiary Organizations
Nonprofit Organizations
Support Groups
The movement of women into the labor force
Mobility - The "Re-potting" hypothesis
Demographic Transformations
Technology- "privatizing" and "individualizing" our use of leisure time: Television which has disrupted many of our opportunities for social-capital formation
These three organizations and groups pondered against the loss of conventional civic organizations
The downward trend is most noticeable for church-related groups, for labor unions, for fraternal and veterans' organizations, and for school-service groups and many other community based trends.
Conversely, membership in professional associations has risen over these years
Rising educational and occupational levels
Essentially the same trends are evident for both men and women
Work hours have significantly increased since the 1960s
Mobility- the automobile, suburbanization and the sun belt were all factors
Demographic transformations- fewer marriages, more divorce, fewer children, lower real wages. - married middle class parents are more involved
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Putnam - What needs to be done
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Sort out the dimensions of social capital. Hard to do since it is not a one dimensional concept
Focus on organizations and networks
Keep an eye on issues involving macrosociological crosscurrents intersecting with current trends.
Such as technology
Assess and recognize the changes in American social capital
Examine public policies and how they can form social networks or norms
Focus on the types of organizations and networks that most effectively generate social capital
Meeting in an electronic form such as chat rooms or email is way different than
Must not harp on the past but look forward
A proposal in San Luis Obispo, California, to require that all new houses have front porches illustrates the power of government to influence where and how networks are formed.
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Civic Engagement
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Civic engagement is a community working together to make a difference
Present and future
It will significantly improve communities
Better education and health, less crime, unemployment poverty and drug abuse
Organizations and friends make networks through civic engagement
These networks can create even create job offers
Politicians use civic engagement for their benefit
There is no exact definition
civically engaged community there is better health and education, and less crime, unemployment, poverty, and drug abuse
Communities that have civic engagement have the same values and view so politicians use civic engagement as a platform
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Social Connections/Connectedness
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Social connections are the interactions that you have with the people around you
Social connectedness is the measure of how people come together and work together
Both are very important to forming networks
Creates trust between people
Social connections can be increased due to leisure
The advantages to having a strong sense of social connections and social connectedness are the exposure and rise of community organization
People are more likely to want to participate in a community that has a strong social connection or deeper desire to provide resources; trust will then be higher and the awareness of human activities and goals.
Social connections can increase more through leisure by having the funds to provide multiple activities to participate in and which leads to create better social connections
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Technology
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Technology positively and negatively effect social capital
Positive:
allows for people to form social capital with people in networks otherwise too small
Can link to more networks through technology then in person
Stay in touch with more people
Negative:
People spend a lot of time home on one of their many devices
Texting or emailing instead of making face-to-face meetings
The connection between people is not as deep as it once was
Positive: The Internet allows for people to form social capital with people in networks otherwise too small.
It enables people to connect with more people and create larger networks
Social media helps people stay connected with people they may not have stayed in touch with otherwise, such as former coworkers, distant family members, or old family friends.
Negative: People spend a lot of time at home sitting watching TV or browsing the Internet instead of interacting with other people. Smart phones can be disruptive because people will spend time texting and on social media instead of interacting with other people in person.
The connection between people is not as deep as if they met and interacted in person
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Relation to Leisure
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Social capital and leisure are connected in various ways
Leisure activities can create social networks, and these networks are often helpful in creating social capital.
This could lead to high funds for a recreation and park budget.
People in the same leisure activities usually share the same norms and values
Sharing the same values leads to civic engagement
Technology has affected social capital and its link to leisure
People sharing the same norms, values, attitudes and opinions will tend to trust each other more leading to civic engagement
Technology has effected the link between social capital and leisure due to diminishing social connections. You can go to online chat rooms, emails, texting and so forth but this is not the same connections you would receive in person.