𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Measuring social capital: An exploration in community–research partnership

✍ Scribed by Robert J. Chaskin; Robert M. Goerge; Ada Skyles; Shannon Guiltinan


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
310 KB
Volume
34
Category
Article
ISSN
0090-4392

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Large numbers of social policy initiatives and community organizations are currently engaged in “community building” efforts that seek, in part, to strengthen informal relationships and the organizational infrastructure of communities and to build the capacity of communities to manage and foster community change. One critical requirement for improving such practice is for communities to have greater access and capacity to use information for planning, advocacy, and assessment. There are, however, a number of challenges to this, especially as it concerns understanding complex, sometimes elusive, dimensions of community circumstances and dynamics—the level of community “social capital,” for example—that are of central interest to those involved in community‐building efforts. The authors describe what was learned through a community–research partnership that attempted to test practical options for community‐based organizations (CBOs) to measure aspects of community social capital for their own purposes and within the constraints of budget, time, and skills under which they work. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Identifying value indicators and social
✍ Alice J. Hausman; Julie Becker; Rickie Brawer 📂 Article 📅 2005 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 102 KB

Increasingly, public health practice is turning to the application of community collaborative models to improve population health status. Despite the growth of these activities, however, evaluations of the national demonstrations have indicated that community health partnerships fail to achieve meas

Exploring ‘unseen’ social capital in com
✍ Deljana Iossifova 📂 Article 📅 2009 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 31 KB

In his first book, Exploring 'Unseen' Social Capital in Community Participation: Everyday Lives of Poor Mainland Chinese Migrants in Hong Kong, Sam Wong draws on his ethnographic research findings to propose a 'pro-poor' alternative to mainstream social capital theorising. Wong claims that the (neo-