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Social Capital - Theory and Research (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,998
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Social Capital - Theory and Research (Hardcover)
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Total price: R5,008
Discovery Miles: 50 080
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Leading scholars in the field of social networks from diverse
disciplines present the first systematic and comprehensive
collection of current theories and empirical research on the
informal connections that individuals have for support, help, and
information from other people. Expanding on concepts originally
formulated by Pierre Bourdieu and James Coleman, this seminal work
will find an essential place with educators and students in the
fields of social networks, rational choice theory, institutions,
and the socioeconomics of poverty, labor markets, social
psychology, and race. The volume is divided into three parts. The
first segment clarifies social capital as a concept and explores
its theoretical and operational bases. Additional segments provide
brief accounts that place the development of social capital in the
context of the family of capital theorists, and identify some
critical but controversial perspectives and statements regarding
social capital in the literature. The editors then make the
argument for the network perspective, why and how such a
perspective can clarify controversies and advance our understanding
of a whole range of instrumental and expressive outcomes. Social
Capital further provides a forum for ongoing research programs
initiated by social scientists working at the crossroads of formal
theory and new methods. These scholars and programs share certain
understandings and approaches in their analyses of social capital.
They argue that social networks are the foundation of social
capital. Social networks simultaneously capture individuals and
social structure, thus serving as a vital conceptual link between
actions and structural constraints, between micro- and macro-level
analyses, and between relational and collective dynamic processes.
They are further cognizant of the dual significance of the
"structural" features of the social networks and the "resources"
embedded in the networks as defining elements of social capital.
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