Social capital : useful but transient
Sankaran, Kizhekepat and Demangeot, Catherine (2011) Social capital : useful but transient. In: Academy of Management, 2011-08-14 - 2011-08-16. (Unpublished)
Full text not available in this repository.Request a copyAbstract
We first review three major approaches to social capital as proposed by Bourdieu, Coleman and Putnam. For the purpose of a comparative treatment, we characterize their perspectives in terms of how they primarily view it: as “a convertible resource”, as “social rationality” and as “network embedded” respectively. We compare these on their rationales for social capital as a category, where it is located, the analytical forms they adopt, domains of their inquiry and how it relates to other forms of capital. We observe their allusions to the complex properties of social capital and distil their arguments further to present social capital as a complex process that is transient, emergent, non-homogenous and irreversible, contextually rooted and respectful of historicity. In doing this we make use of how the Austrian school of economics treats capital – as non-homogenous and emergent. It provides us with further conceptual grounding for treating social capital as a complex process, wherein, from an agency perspective, the primacy is on incremental actions which are largely tentative and uncertain of outcomes. We describe some of the recent studies which have begun to treat social capital as the outcome of emergent processes.
-
-
Item type: Conference or Workshop Item(Paper) ID code: 32457 Dates: DateEventAugust 2011PublishedSubjects: Social Sciences > Industries. Land use. Labor > Management. Industrial Management Department: Strathclyde Business School > Marketing Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 08 Aug 2011 09:09 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 16:30 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/32457