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Social Capital: Promise and Pitfalls of its Role in Development

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TLDR
This paper reviewed the origins and definitions of the concept of social capital as it has developed in the recent literature and examined the limitations of this concept when interpreted as a causal force able to transform communities and nations.
Abstract
The purpose of this commentary is threefold. First, to review the origins and definitions of the concept of social capital as it has developed in the recent literature. Second, to examine the limitations of this concept when interpreted as a causal force able to transform communities and nations. Third, to present several relevant examples from the recent empirical literature on Latin American urbanisation and migration. These examples point to the significance of social networks and community monitoring in the viability of grass-roots economic initiatives and the simultaneous difficulty of institutionalising such forces.Current interest in the concept of social capital in the field of national development stems from the limitations of an exclusively economic approach toward the achievement of the basic developmental goals: sustained growth, equity, and democracy. The record of application of neoliberal adjustment policies in less developed nations is decidedly mixed, even when evaluated by strict economic criteria. Orthodox adjustment policies have led to low inflation and sustained growth in some countries, while in others they have failed spectacularly, leading to currency crises, devaluations, and political instability. The ‘one-size-fits- all’ package of economic policies foisted by the International Monetary Fund and the US Treasury on countries at very different levels of development have led to a series of contradictory outcomes that orthodox economic theory itself is incapable of explaining.

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Assimilation and Transnationalism: Determinants of Transnational Political Action among Contemporary Migrants1

TL;DR: The authors showed that migrants' habitual transnational political engagement is not as extensive, socially unbounded, "deterritorialized, and liberatory" as previously argued, and that the potential of transnationalism for transforming power asymmetries within and across countries has yet to be determined.
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Migrant Transnationalism and Modes of Transformation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the ways that specific sociocultural institutions have been modified in the course of being stretched across the globe, and how such institutions are involved in more deep-seated patterns of change or structural transformation.
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Socio-cultural factors and entrepreneurial activity An overview

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of socio-cultural factors on enterprise development remains under studied and the aim of this paper is to integrate, from a theoretical perspective, the sociocultural factors and entrepreneurial activity, and the article points out that the institutional approach could be an apt framework to develop future research analyzing the socio-culture factors that influence the decisions to create new businesses.
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Entrepreneurship, Social Capital, and Institutions: Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship Across Nations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors model and test the relationship between social and commercial entrepreneurship drawing on social capital theory, and propose that the country prevalence rate of social entrepreneurship is an indicator of constructible nation-level social capital and enhances the likelihood of individual commercial entry.
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Gender and the silences of social capital: lessons from Latin America

TL;DR: The authors examines the gendered assumptions that govern efforts to build social capital, and explores some of the tensions that have arisen in post-transition Latin America between women's rights and social capital agendas.