Measuring community strength and social capital


Autoria(s): Western, J.; Stimson, R.; Baum, S.; Van Gellecum, Y.
Contribuinte(s)

M. Coombes

A. Gillespie

R. Harris

A. Hull

M. Kwan

R. Leichenko

N. Marshall

A. Pike

S. Roper

C. Wren

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Five case study communities in both metropolitan and regional urban locations in Australia are used as test sites to develop measures of 'community strength' on four domains: Natural Capital; Produced Economic Capital; Human Capital; and Social and Institutional Capital. The paper focuses on the fourth domain. Sample surveys of households in the five case study communities used a survey instrument with scaled items to measure four aspects of social capital - formal norms, informal norms, formal structures and informal structures - that embrace the concepts of trust, reciprocity, bonds, bridges, links and networks in the interaction of individuals with their community inherent in the notion social capital. Exploratory principal components analysis is used to identify factors that measure those aspects of social and institutional capital, while a confirmatory analysis based on Cronbach's alpha explores the robustness of the measures. Four primary scales and 15 subscales are identified when defining the domain of social and institutional capital. Further analysis reveals that two measures - anomie, and perceived quality of life and wellbeing - relate to certain primary scales of social capital.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75015

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Routledge

Palavras-Chave #Environmental Studies #Geography #Social Capital #Community Performance #Factor Analysis #Australia #Policy #C1 #370401 Urban and Regional Studies #750301 The distribution of wealth
Tipo

Journal Article