A framework for social capital : a dissertation presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Massey University, Palmerton [i.e. Palmerston] North, New Zealand
Loading...
Date
2009
DOI
Open Access Location
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Massey University
Rights
The Author
Abstract
This dissertation is concerned with enhancing the utility of social capital by
developing and testing a comprehensive and measurable framework as a tool for
researchers, policy-makers, and development theorists and practitioners. A
framework was developed for measuring the degree to which different forms of
social capital reside in a community and for distinguishing community-to community
variations. The Framework was also designed to identify the
accumulation of social capital in relation to structural characteristics within a
community, and to identify what advantages might be associated with variants of
social capital.
The pursuit of the understanding of social capital has been convened within narrow
disciplinary fields and has reduced the notion in definition, purpose, and utility.
Much of the literature and past research has focused on approximations to identify
social capital that are field-specific and representative of, at best, markers of social
capital, rather than social capital itself. For this reason, this dissertation is concerned
with developing a robust framework that has the potential to embrace the nature and
extent of social capital across these disciplinary fields, while providing insight into
the forms, influences, and trajectories of social capital.
The utility of the Social Capital Framework that was developed for this dissertation
was examined by transforming the Framework into a survey tool for administering
in two communities to identify applicability and sensitivity for identifying the
degree to which variants of social capital reside. The results showed that the
Framework was able to distinguish the degree to which different forms of social
capital existed, and how the social capital accumulates in relations to structural
variables, in particular, gender. The Framework’s utility was not universal across all
forms of social capital and showed that further enhancements are required,
particularly, if it is to enable social capital to be attributed to forms of advantage.
The results also identified areas where future research would be of value,
particularly, in examining the trajectory of people’s forms of social capital.
Description
Keywords
Social capital framework, Gender, Development studies