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Measuring Social Capital : An Integrated Questionnaire

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TLDR
The Integrated Questionnaire for the Measurement of Social Capital (SC-IQ) as discussed by the authors is a set of empirical tools for measuring social capital with a focus on applications in developing countries.
Abstract
The idea of social capital has enjoyed a remarkable rise to prominence in both the theoretical and applied social science literature over the last decade. While lively debate has accompanied that journey, thereby helping to advance our thinking and to clarify areas of agreement and disagreement, much still remains to be done. One approach that we hope can help bring further advances for both scholars and practitioners is the provision of a set of empirical tools for measuring social capital. The purpose of this paper is to introduce such a tool-the Integrated Questionnaire for the Measurement of Social Capital (SC-IQ)-with a focus on applications in developing countries. The tool aims to generate quantitative data on various dimensions of social capital as part of a larger household survey (such as the Living Standards Measurement Survey or a household income/expenditure survey). Specifically, six dimensions are considered: groups and networks; trust and solidarity; collective action and cooperation; information and communication; social cohesion and inclusion; empowerment and political action. The paper addresses sampling and data collection issues for implementing the SC-IQ and provides guidance for the use and analysis of data. The tool has been pilot-tested in Albania and Nigeria and a review of lessons learned is presented.

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Understanding knowledge sharing in virtual communities: an integration of social capital and social cognitive theories

TL;DR: The study holds that the facets of social capital -- social interaction ties, trust, norm of reciprocity, identification, shared vision and shared language -- will influence individuals' knowledge sharing in virtual communities.
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Health by association? Social capital, social theory, and the political economy of public health

TL;DR: It is argued that this framework helps to reconcile three perspectives on the efficacy of social capital, incorporating a broader reading of history, politics, and the empirical evidence regarding the mechanisms connecting types of network structure and state-society relations to public health outcomes.
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Measuring Capacities for Community Resilience

TL;DR: This paper measured the sets of adaptive capacities for economic development and social capital in the Norris et al. (2008) community resilience model with publicly accessible population indicators, and combined the indicators into composites of Economic Development and Social Capital and an additive index of community resilience using Mississippi county data, and validated these against a well-established index of social vulnerability and aggregated survey data on collective efficacy.
References
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Book

Community Organizing: Building Social Capital as a Development Strategy

TL;DR: Social Capital and Networks in Community Development Framing the LISC Demonstration A Social Capital Perspective on Community Development Practice Getting off to a Good Start Positioning the Program in the Field Organizing CDCs and Developing Indigenous Leadership Building Relationships with the Private Sector Transition and its Consequences Lessons Building Social Capital as discussed by the authors.
Posted Content

The Economic Approach to Social Capital

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present evidence that supports the individual-based model of social capital formation, including seven facts: (l) the relationship between social capital and age is first increasing and then decreasing, (i) social capital declines with expected mobility, social capital investment is higher in occupations with greater returns to social skills, (ii) social connections fall sharply with physical distance, (iii) people who invest in human capital also invest in social capital, and (iv), social capital appears to have interpersonal complementarities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cents and Sociability: Household Income and Social Capital in Rural Tanzania*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that associational relationships and social norms of villages in rural Tanzania are both capital and social, and that a village's social capital has an effect on the incomes of the households in that village, an effect that is empirically large, definitely social and plausibly causal.