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Social capital, the individual

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Title: Social capital, the individual


1
Social capital, the individual agencyWhat
works for whom in what circumstances
  • Leesa Wheelahan10 November 2004Faculty of
    Education Monash University

2
Central argument
  • social justice advocates seduced by the social
  • social capital been colonised by economics to an
    even greater extent than other areas of social
    science
  • putative rational actor methodological
    individualism
  • struggle power relations replaced by
    information flows transaction costs
  • collective irreducible properties of groups
    replaced by aggregated actions
  • for social capital to be useful we must restore
  • Bourdieus notion of field (with some
    modifications)
  • contextualise ask what works for whom under
    what circumstances

3
Overview
  • explores the way in which colonisation taken
    place 3 mechanisms
  • theory of motivation (rational choice versus
    sociological explanations)
  • methodological individualism
  • illicit reduction of qualities to narrow
    measurable quantities
  • consequences methods dismal science used
    additive, not generative

4
Overview cont
  • contrast an approach based on critical realism
  • groups have different irreducible properties
  • social capital a property of groups not
    individuals varies with context
  • emerges from the interplay between agency
    structure
  • cannot be considered independently of power
    conflict Bourdieu much to offer, but some
    differences
  • asks different sorts of questions
  • causal mechanisms, not correlations
  • implications for methodology

5
Definitions of social capital
  • Productivity Commission (2003)
  • Social capital is an evolving concept. It
    relates to the social norms, networks and trust
    that facilitate cooperation within or between
    groups.
  • Woolcock (1998 155)
  • a broad term encompassing the norms and
    networks facilitating action for mutual benefit.

6
The 3 key theorists
  • Bourdieu (1992 119)
  • Social capital is the sum of resources, actual
    or virtual, that accrue to an individual or a
    group by virtue of possessing a durable network
    of more or less institutionalised relationships
    of mutual acquaintance and recognition.
  • will argue that Bourdieu taken completely out of
    context

7
Coleman (1988 98)
  • Social capital is defined by its function. It is
    not a single entity but a variety of different
    entities, with two elements in common they all
    consist of some aspect of social structures, and
    they facilitate certain actions of actors-whether
    persons or corporate actors-within the structure.
    Like other forms of capital, social capital is
    productive, making possible the achievement of
    certain ends that in its absence would not be
    possible.
  • unlike other capitals, inheres in the structure
    of relations between actors not individuals
  • takes three forms obligations expectations,
    information channels, social norms

8
Putnam (2000 18-19)
  • By analogy with notions of physical capital and
    human capital tools and training that enhance
    individual productivity the core idea of social
    capital theory is that social networks have
    valuesocial contacts affect the productivity of
    individuals and groups
  • social capital refers to connections among
    individuals social networks and the norms of
    reciprocity and trustworthiness that come from
    them.

9
Presumed commonalities
  • social networks facilitate action within social
    structures (Winter, 2000 26)
  • Despite their differences, all three consider
    that social capital consists of personal
    connections and interpersonal interaction,
    together with the shared sets of values that are
    associated with these contacts. (Field, 2003
    13)
  • Lin (2001 6) groups Bourdieu, Coleman Putnam
    under the broad heading of neocapitalist theories
    social structure no longer based on
    antagonistic struggle, now one of layered or
    stratified negotiation
  • Burt (2001 32) argues all 3 think that creates a
    competitive advantage
  • links micro, meso macro

10
Lots of differences
  • normative/neutral (dark side)
  • more government/less government (aka self
    reliance/welfare)
  • bridging/bonding or holes/closed
  • means/ends or object/effect distinction
  • universal/contextual
  • too vague/too narrow
  • epiphenomenal/conscious investment
  • inheres in individuals/social relations
  • what to measure how to measure if to measure

11
Fundamental problems
  • individual motivation
  • rational choice theory/game theory underpins much
    implicitly (but not all Cox Caldwell, Baron,
    Field, Schuller, Fevre, Falk Ballati etc)
  • methodological individualism
  • in ontology methodology
  • derived from the abstract rational actor fully
    formed out of nothing with preferences
    instrumentally pursued
  • but also from some interpretative accounts that
    reduce structure to negotiated meaning

12
Social-network theory social capital an
extreme example
  • Lin (2001 6) Social capital refers to
    Investment in social relations with expected
    returnsIndividuals engage in interactions and
    networking in order to produce profits.
  • Social capital embedded resources in social
    networks mobilised for purposive action enhances
    outcomes of actions in 4 ways
  • facilitates flow of information
  • social ties exert influence on agents
  • certify social credentials
  • reinforce identity recognition
  • inheres in networks not individuals networks
    aggregations of individual interactions
  • counterposes (trendy) collective aggregate (p.9)

13
Burt structural holes
  • social capital is a metaphor about advantage.
    Society can be viewed as a market in which people
    exchange all variety of goods and ideas in
    pursuit of their interests. (Burt, 2001 31)
  • a complement to human capital
  • structural holes give access to unique
    information therefore competitive advantage
    needs closure to realise advantage

14
Coleman rational choice theory the basic
premise, rest window dressing
  • explicit aim import the economists principle
    of rational action for use in the analysis of
    social systems proper, including but not limited
    to economic systems Coleman (1988 97 my
    emphasis this the colonisation process)
  • he argues cant have a pastiche need a coherent
    framework import elements of the other
  • begin with a theory of rational action each
    actor has control over resources interests,
    social capital a resourceactor has goals
    independently arrived at, acts independently, is
    wholly self-interested
  • methodological individualism used to build the
    social from the aggregation of the individual

15
Winter recaststhe problem of sociology
  • acknowledges individual/collective debates
    debates about motivation, but still makes narrow
    assumptions
  • addresses old new debates
  • assess extent to which individual actions are
    guided by social norms of trust reciprocity (p.
    19)
  • solving dilemmas of collective action based on
    individual pursuit of self-interest
  • socialised view of human action draws from
    classical sociology the question How is social
    order possible if each individual is maximising
    his or her own self interest?
  • Narrow parameters based on individualist
    assumptions

16
Bourdieu the rational actor historically
specific, not universal
  • instrumental rationalism ethnocentric
    universalisation of historically specific
    conception of human motivation
  • All the capacities and dispositions it liberally
    grants to its abstract actor-the art of
    estimating and taking chances, the ability to
    anticipate through a kind of practical induction,
    the capacity to bet on the possible against the
    probable for a measured risk, the propensity to
    invest, access to economic information, etc.
    can only be acquired under definite social and
    economic conditions. (Bourdieu, 1992 124)

17
Market behavioursapplied to all aspects of life
  • in place of collective structured conflicting
    interests, information flows transaction costs
  • more benign theories 3rd way based on view that
    communicative competence must underpin economy (
    therefore society) requires egalitarianism not
    hierarchy (Szreter 2000 Maskell 2000) not
    poore, nasty brutish short
  • but non-market behaviours imported ( recast) to
    account for imperfect markets which are then
    generalised to all of life
  • eg. social-network theory sounds relational, but
    isnt

18
The social becomesattributes of the individual
  • identified as features of individuals or
    individual exchanges, then abstracted
    generalised
  • Yet, from social capital having been one type of
    capital within Bourdieus work, it has become
    universalised across all non-economic aspects.
    The same step has allowed its social, historical,
    and cultural content to be set aside. (Fine,
    200163)
  • socially shaped preferences internalised as
    relatively stable preferences
  • study of preferences pursuit of preferences,
    not socially structured social relations (Archer
    2000)
  • can add subtract individualised preferences
    actions, not generative social relations
  • then add compare one population to another

19
Methodological implications
  • the social the aggregation of the individual
  • atomistic conception of reality
  • successionist explanations seek correlations
    not causal mechanisms
  • depicts observation as fragmented into simple,
    unproblematic, indivisible readings. (Sayer
    1992 195)
  • additive models holding variables constant
    much social capital research in this vein (Putnam
    can account for about 75 of decline added it
    up!)

20
Cant explain causation
  • reduces social structures relations to
    socio-psychological states
  • eg. Onyx Bullen (2000 116-117) government
    institutions not found to be related to factors
    they measure
  • defined social capital as propensities views
    inherent in individuals, measured that way,
    found the enabling conditions excluded
    self-fulfilling prophecy
  • The pattern of correlations suggests that social
    capital is about more immediate and personal
    connections between people and events, rather
    than the more distant and formal relationship
    with government institutions and policy.
    Correlations doesnt allow causation

21
Substitutes the things of logic for the logic
of things
  • Bourdieu (1992 123) citing Marx of Hegel
  • So just as commodity fetishism defines how real
    production relationships appear as relations
    between things, so the individualistic
    conceptions of human and social capital obscure
    the nature of social relations through which
    learning takes place and through which society
    impinges upon individuals experiences of life.
    (Fine Green, 2000 87)
  • statistical patterns give us a starting point but
    is not a way of accounting for or explaining
    proportions of variance. (Carter New, 2004 9)
  • social relations in open systems with co-acting
    mechanisms task to identify generative
    mechanisms open systems because peopled

22
Critical realism an alternative
  • draw on Archers work Bourdieus student
  • distinguishes between people parts
  • relational groups have causal properties
    irreducible to individuals (eg a choir, social
    class etc)
  • society consists of as systems of human
    relations among social positions (Archer, 1995
    106).
  • temporal dimension important degrees of freedom
    relative autonomy of social structures

23
Relationshipbetween people parts
  • Structures are described as generative
    mechanisms, because when their casual powers are
    realised they work to make something happen. But
    the effects of structures are mediated by agency
    in social life, nothing happens without the
    activation of the causal powers of people.
    Crucial among these is the power to decide.
    (Carter New, 2004 14)
  • differently resourced subjects making
    constrained choices amongst the range of
    opportunities provided (Pawson Tilley, 1997
    46)

24
Analytical dualism emergence
  • explores the interplay between people parts
    agency/structure
  • emergence of social cultural structures which
    shape (but not determine) future agents
  • relative autonomy of individual social here
    Archer differs from Bourdieu

25
Bourdieus theory of fields
  • different fields structured by different
    compositions of capitals structures, roles
    positions, gives rise to habitus
  • Such notions as habitus, field, and capital can
    be defined, but only within the theoretical
    system they constitute, not in isolation.
    (Bourdieu, 1992 96)
  • fields emerge historically, and are sites of
    struggles determined by structure relative
    positions
  • A capital does not exist and function except in
    relation to a field. (p. 101)
  • Every field constitutes a potentially open space
    of play whose boundaries are dynamic border which
    are the stake of struggles within the field
    itself. (p. 104)

26
Studying a field need to
  • analyse the field vis-à-vis the field of power
  • map positions of actors institutions competing
    for legitimate form of specific authority
  • analyse habitus of agents (104-105)
  • different from social-network analysis
  • structure of field determines links In network
    analysis, the study of these underlying
    structures has been sacrificed to the analysis of
    particular linkages (between agents or
    institutions) and flows (of information,
    resources, services, etc.) through which they
    become visible no doubt uncovering the
    structure requires that one put to work a
    relational mode of thinking that is more
    difficult to translate into quantitative and
    formalized data (p11.)

27
Bourdieus notion of interest
  • To be interested is to accord a given social
    game that what happens in it matters, that its
    stakes are importantand worth pursuing
  • This is to say that the concept of interest, as
    I construe it, is totally different from the
    transhistorical and universal interest of
    utilitarian theory. p. 116

28
Need a differenttheory of interests
  • one that is socially contextually located
  • what is crucial to our decision-making are our
    ultimate concerns, namely that to which we are
    emotionally drawn, as modified by our knowledge
    about them. (Archer 2000 54)
  • our ultimate concerns not always (or at least not
    limited to) instrumental rationalism
  • different notion of rationalism acting in
    accord with the nature of the object
  • Fevres notion of identity theory of motivation

29
Requires different methodological approach
  • Modelling reality using quantitative methods is
    an important part of any scientific practice.
    Such modelling must employ methods which in some
    way correspond to, represent, the reality being
    modelled. That means that the methods must take
    account of the nonlinearity which characterizes
    the social world and its inter-relationships with
    the natural, of the character of the multi-level
    and inter-penetrating complex open systems of the
    social and natural world, and of the significance
    of all the micro, meso and macro levels of social
    structure and social interaction. (Byrne, 2004
    63)

30
What works for whomunder what circumstances
  • What this points to is the need for a careful
    look at subject and contextual differences in
    terms of who succeeds and who fails within any
    programme
  • The causal power of an initiative lies in the
    underlying mechanism (M), names the resources
    (material, cognitive or emotional) it provides
    that are expected to influence the subjects
    actions. (Pawson, 2004 31)
  • need to bring back context power relations
    not abstracted variables
  • look for what is different why this help to
    get away from the deficit assumptions in much of
    the literature
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