socialcapital

So­ci­al ca­pi­tal and informal so­ci­al net­works

Abstract

Social capital has gained much attention in rural development research. Yet, social capital in the form of social networks is a largely missing dimension in income and poverty analysis. Moreover, most research on social capital assumes that it is a uniform source. The effects of different forms of social capital on household outcome are rarely investigated. The objective of this research project, entitled “Social capital and informal social networks in a changing natural and institutional environment” is therefore to broaden our understanding of social capital and networks in rural household economies of developing and transition countries. The discussion of differences and similarities in the household endowment with social capital in the two country comparison (Vietnam/Thailand) contributes to a more distinct knowledge of the role of social capital in rural development. The hypotheses of this research are: Different forms of social capital have distinct effects on a household’s potential of accessing scarce resources and thus household welfare. The standard criticism leveled at the social capital concept is that it is usually defined too broadly and is thus analytically useless. We therefore define social capital more narrowly and leanly as interpersonal networks (ties) plus resources. In this definition, it is the resource that turns the social structure into social capital. In the context of agricultural economics, the data collection approach adopted is an innovative one borrowed from the field of sociology. A ‘personal network survey’ is carried out to measure the individual social capital of rural households. In our analyses we distinguish between three different forms of social capital: bonding, bridging, and linking. Using cluster analysis, four different variables have been created: 1. bonding, 2. bridging, 3. bondinglink, and 4. bridginglink. These variables have then been used as explanatory variables in various multiple regression models to measure the impact of social capital on various household outcomes and its influence on access to resources. Interestingly, depending on the type of social capital the outcome variables are not influenced at all or influenced positively, but they may also be influenced negatively. This implies non-naïve propagation. The moist surprising result is that bonding social capital, when significant, always had a positive influence on the outcome variables. This is surprising as most literature suggested the opposite following the argument of ‘the strength of weak ties’. But bridging and inking social capital are less often significant and have a mostly negative influence. The prominence of bonding social capital in the rural Southeast Asian context could, on the one hand, mean that the information society has not yet reached those areas and thus the information gathering attribute of bridging and linking social capital is not that important. On the other hand, it could also be that in an Asian context bonding social capital has similar attributes as the other two forms of social capital.


Research project by

Buchenrieder (nee Schrieder), Gertrud, Prof. Dr.
(IAMO) Department: External Environment for Agriculture and Policy Analysis
and
Dufhues
, Thomas, Dr.
(IAMO) Department: External Environment for Agriculture and Policy Analysis

Proposed research period:
01.01. 2007 – 31.12. 2009
Finanzierungsquelle DFG (BU 1319/9-1)


Research partners:


Research partner in
Thailand
:

Kasetsart University
Bangkhen, Bangkok, Thailand
http://www.ku.ac.th/




Research Partner in
Vietnam:

Hanoi Agricultural University No. 1
Gialam-Hanoi, Vietnam
http://www.hau1.edu.vn




Research partner in both countries:

The social capital research project is associated to the Sonderforschungsbereich SFB-564 of the University of Hohenheim "Research for Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Mountainous Regions of Southeast Asia - The Uplands Program".
https://www.uni-hohenheim.de/sfb564/



Research Team

Project leader:
Buchenrieder, Gertrud, Prof. Dr.
Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Central and Eastern Europe (IAMO)
Department 'External Environment for Agriculture and Policy Analysis'
Telephone:      + 49 (0345) 2928-110
Email:             buchenrieder(at)iamo.de

 

Implementing researcher:
Dufhues, Thomas, Dr.
Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Central and Eastern Europe (IAMO)
Department 'External Environment for Agriculture and Policy Analysis'
Telephone:      +66 (2) 9621899
Email:             dufhues(at)iamo.de

 

Team Thailand:

Thai supervisor:
Nuchanata Mungkung, Ass. Prof. Dr.
Economics Kasetsart University, Faculty of Economics
Department of Agricultural Resource Economics
Telephone:      +66 (2) 9428649
Email:             feconnm(at)ku.ac.th

 

Team Vietnam:

Vietnamese supervisor:
Pham Thi My Dung, Prof. Dr.
Hanoi Agricultural University
Faculty of Economics and Rural Development
Telephone:      +84 (91) 2819135
Email:             hien_hien1939(at)yahoo.com

 

Vietnamese PhD student and research assistant: 
Mr.Hoang Dinh Quoc
Telephone:      +84 (912) 256876
Email:             hoangdinhquoc(at)yahoo.com