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Showing papers by "Alan Warde published in 2003"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article used the British Household Panel Study (BHPS) to consider the changing volume and distribution of voluntary association membership (and hence social capital) in Great Britain and found that whilst the volume of social capital is not declining, it is becoming increasingly class specific, and that its relative aggregate stability masks considerable turnover at the individual level.
Abstract: This Note uses the British Household Panel Study (BHPS) to consider the changing volume and distribution of voluntary association membership (and hence social capital) in Great Britain. We aim to supplement Hall's study of trends in social capital published in this Journal with more recent and longitudinal data. This allows us to show that whilst the volume of social capital is not declining, it is becoming increasingly class specific, and that its relative aggregate stability masks considerable turnover at the individual level. These findings are significant for current debates on social capital.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply social network analysis to three case study social movement organizations based in the UK: a local Labour Party branch, an environmental group, and a conservation group.
Abstract: This paper applies social network analysis to three case study social movement organizations based in the north of England: a local Labour Party branch, an environmental group, and a conservation group. Using a postal survey of members, we chart the extent of ties between members of these three groups, indicating how each group has its own internal social dynamics and characteristics that are related to the nature of the movement organizations themselves. We explore how the network structures interrelate with the socio-demographic structure of the membership of the three organizations, and we show there are important differences in the way that core members of the three organizations are recruited compared to those who are either peripheral or isolated. Our paper is the first to analyse the networks of whole populations of case study organizations in the UK, and can therefore be read as developing the potential of social network analysis for case study research and for understanding social movements. Analytically we argue it is important to distinguish two different types of ways that networks are important. They can be seen as offering resources for mobilization, or they can be seen as providing a means of integrating particular types of individuals into organizations. It is this latter sense that offers a more fundamental role for network analysis, and we argue that it offers an important way of developing insights from resource mobilization theory by relating them to Bourdieu's provocative arguments regarding the exclusiveness of the political field.

30 citations


BookDOI
01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: In this paper, Nelson et al. discuss the complexities and limits of market organisation, and the evolution of the UK software market: Scale of demand and role of competencies, and open systems and regional innovation.
Abstract: 1. On the complexities and limits of market organisation - R. R. Nelson 2. Markets, embeddedness and trust: Problems of polysemy and idealism - A. Sayer 3. Cognition and markets - B. J. Loasby 4. Competition as economic instituted process - M. Harvey 5. Markets, materiality and the 'new economy' - D. Slater 6. Between markets, firms and networks: Constituting the cultural economy - F. Tonkiss 7. Regulatory issues and industrial policy in football - J. Michie and C. Oughton 8. The evolution of the UK software market: Scale of demand and role of competencies - S. Athreye 9. Open systems and regional innovation: The resurgence of Route 128 in Massachusetts - M. H. Best Conclusion

24 citations