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Social Capital in Theory and Practice
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Page 1: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Social Capital in Theory and Practice

Page 2: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

ENVIRONMENT

SOCIETY

ECONOMY

Page 3: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

What will I tell?

• Background – Me

• Why Social Capital

• What is Social Capital

• How to develop Social Capital

• Future trends in social innovation and social entrepreneurship

Page 4: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Who am I?• Born in the north• Sports• Mountains • Business• Culture • Work

23-04-18 Externa relationer

Page 5: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Why focus on the social dimension in development of society ?

Page 6: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Great challenges that only could be solved togheter....

Page 7: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.
Page 8: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

What is social capital about?

“Your corn is ripe today; mine will be so tomorrow. This is profitable for us both, that I should labour with you today, and that you should aid me tomorrow”

(David Hume, A Treatsie of Human Nature, 1740)

Page 9: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

but also..

Social capital is the glue that holds societies together and without which there can be no economic growth or human wellbeing.Christiaan Grootaert Social Capital, The

missing link, 1998, World Bank

Page 10: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

“It is hard not to conclude that social capital produces about 90 percent of income in wealthy societies like those of the United States or Northwestern Europe.”

(Herbert Simon Nobel Prize Winner for Economics ‘UBI and Tax Rates’ 2000.)

Herbert Simon (1916-2001)

Page 11: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.
Page 12: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

A common definition of social capital

Networks together with shared norms, values and understanding that facilitate co-operation within or among groups of people

(Office for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)

Page 13: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Trust – The fabric of social capital

Trust between individuals becomes trust between strangers and trust of a broad fabric of social institutions; ultimately, it becomes a shared set of values, virtues, and expectations within society as a whole. Without this interaction trust decays; this decay begins to manifest itself in serious social problems…

(‘The Necessity of Politics’ Beem 1999: 20)

Page 14: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Elements of Networks

• Bonding – within groups or communities, characterised by strong connections (families, ethnic groups, clubs, etc.)

• Bridging – horizontally across boundaries, characterised by weak links (interreligious, interracial, intergenerational, across wider social networks)

• Linking – weak links made vertically between relationships of power (e.g. class structure)

Page 15: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Strengths of Social Capital• Compensate for low levels of other capital (human,

physical, financial)

• Reduce conflict between different communities (excess bonding social capital will achieve the opposite increasing the cost of regulation and control across community boundaries)

• Reduce crime

• Increase educational achievement

• Higher economic performance

• Higher levels of happiness

• Better health

Page 16: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

The more social capital people have access to the better they perceive their health.

– Those who take part in social activities consider their health better than non-participants do.

– Those that have great trust in people perceived their health as good.

(Social Capital in Finland, 2000)

Page 17: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Social Capital Thrives on

• Ownership, equality & collective identity

• Transparency & information exchange

• Collaboration on common goals & participation

• Mutual trust and reciprocity

• Informal interaction

• Openness to new ideas

• Access to positions of power and influence

Page 18: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Social Capital in Practice

Page 19: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Västra Götalandsregionen –(Region West Sweden) Facts

• Largest region in Sweden

• 4 subregions – Responsible for Economic growth programs

• App 1 500 000 people live in West Sweden

• Gothenburg main town – App 500 000 people

• 49 Municpalities, out of 290 in Sweden (local governance)

Page 20: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

• Organised work devoted to the social economy started in 2001

• According to the regional guidelines the significance of the social economy and its protagonists must be brought out clearly in all strategic development work and in the implementation of Vision Västra Götaland

• 14) Joint action with universities and schools ..”The concept of social capital and the knowledge around its significance for development and growth should continue to be highlighted by means of concrete studies and development projects in the collaboration between, for example, municipalities and the higher education sector.”

Page 21: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Dynamic Growth Capital

In the beginning there was an idea about people as the main resource…

Now it develops into an interactive knowledge and learning platform – It took some time…

Page 22: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Dynamic Growth Capital Aims 1)To increase the knowledge about social

capital

2) Create a modell to be used in the rest of west Sweden for work with related issues and in similar organisation form (From analysis to implementation)

Page 23: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Structure of project

• Participants:

• Västra Götalandsregionen (Region of West Sweden)

• School of Business, Economics and Law at Gothenburg University

• Four municipalities in Region West Sweden participated

• Swedish ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications

• Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions

Page 24: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

View of process Nov 2006 – 2010

Page 25: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Work process in the platform• The project group meets every other month (7-10 people) –

Discussion and issues are adressed

• University makes a study of a choosen issue by the municipality

• Meanwhile a seminar is arranged in a local arena (municipality, region) for spread of information when the study is finished.

• The local arena has the responsibility of inviting people from its surroundings – Businesses, Associations and Locals are invited

• Marketing of results – Reports are spread through media, webs and through printed material.

Page 26: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Micro projekt as method

• Center of Innovation – Business network

• Civic Sector as resource – 12 workshops

• Social Sustainability in School

• Development of Tourism network

• Public Health Project• Ethnic minorities as

resource

Page 27: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Our defintion of social capital – It took some time to come to agreement among

many actors!!

• Social capital exists between people and develops with time – It`a about relations

• Social capital is expressed through trust that is created in relations among people – Makes it agile

• Social capital is a resource which is built in action

www.connectsverige.se

Page 28: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

A future model Municipality of Vårgårda – Based on diagnosis

Local Authorities

Resources are build and enhancedthroughco-operation

Civic sector Business

Page 29: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

”Bridging silos” – a means of transfer of ideas and knowledge between and

within groups • Example: ”Microproject Business climate in Vårgårda”, seminar on Business

climate

• Next microproject ” Social Entreprenuership and Tourism” Seminar on Social Entreprenuership and Tourism, earlier participants are invited to a new seminar

”Microproject ” ”Microproject” ”Microproject” - Participants and knowledge is transfered to next seminar-

Se. Business Cl. Se. Social Entre. Se. Outside power stru.

Page 30: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Challenges in building social capital

• We have to act?

• It`s about eating ice-cream

• You must be concrete?

• I do not feel comfortable with this concept?

• Language - Norms are hard to challange – Icehotel!!

• They are to negative on the list!www.connectsverige.se

Page 31: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Business Value - Income

Value of:

IdentityHappinessInspirationEthicsCommunity

Value

Page 32: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Resources

Page 33: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Different roles, different language, goals and

expectations –Building social capital in

a local environments is about canalizing

expectations into mutual benefits

Resources

Page 34: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Guidance in working with SC

What makes SC concrete! (Easier to invest in a house!)

Storybuilding (Roskilde, Langenegg, Here We are, Trangsviken)

What values do you have?

From resources to capital – awarness is the answer

Page 35: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

To measure and to make social capital concrete

‘What a community chooses to measure has a tremendous impact on the quality of life of its members”

(North West Policy Center, Seattle, USA)

Page 36: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

‘Measuring’ Social Capital to …

• Make visible what is currently invisible

• Highlight the value human relationships

• Explore the quantity and quality of relationships

• Put numbers to soft outcomes in order to benchmark

• Move from anecdotal to strategic and replicable

• Develop Action Plans to begin investing strategically in social capital

Page 37: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Changing Community Landscapes…

• Matrix showing social capital (3 elements) against ACTIVITIES…

• Stakeholder map - RELATIONSHIPS…• Social capital questionnaires before and

after CCL…completed by community• Post-CCL project look at changes in

norms/values; trust/reciprocity; networks…• Report…• Case study…

Page 38: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

ACTION POINT DATE ACHIEVED (to be

completed by NIDOS)

OUTCOMES RESPONSIBILITY

Develop a Network Handbook, to be updated every 3-5 years. [Info on Committee’s roles

and external networks. Info on conflict resolution (case studies of mutual support, achievements of working groups, members,

etc)]

Extending knowledge of Norms & values. Connecting past and present to proactively allow growth in norms & values enabling

opportunities to remain flexible and learn.

NIDOS staff and temporary working

group.

Introduce options for Network to be involved in decision making process [Transparency of

process, how decision was arrived at, possibly using ICT.]

Increasing opportunities for equity and collective ownership, maximising social

network development opportunities of ICT (bridging, bonding, can be extended once

initial face-to-face contact is made).

NIDOS staff with support from ICT specialist (from

Network if possible).

Encourage members to support each other [Collective / joint activities e.g. a common

resource library (photos, videos, news articles, information on members awards); campaigns

like Make Poverty History]

Increased reciprocity can lead to increased levels of trust. Target of 5% per year increase

in levels of trust for next 3 years.

NIDOS staff and working group.

Provide access to strategic stakeholders [Increase links to external agencies by

increasing Associate Membership]

Increasing opportunities for linking to take place

Management Committee & staff.

Investigate the possibility for more sub-groups and more sub-group activity

Increasing opportunities for bridging to take place and informal information transfer

NIDOS staff

Develop or revisit marketing strategy for external (public) and internal (Network)

audience. [Use information from resource library to reinforce Network Handbook messages, promote collective identity].

Increasing collective understanding and ownership of aims & objectives via knowledge.

Highlight opportunities for reciprocity via partnership working.

Working Group

Page 39: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.
Page 40: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.
Page 41: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Where are we going? ”Mission drift into the future”

Page 42: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Trends in society supporting SC development

• Tällberg Foundation • World Economic Forum – Klaus Schwab

• SKOLL – Foundation – Jeff SKOLL

• TRUST network USA

• NEXT Generation (Howard Buffet, Michael Young)

• World Business Council of Sustainable development

• Clinton Global Initiative

• Social Capital Markets (Impact Investments)

Page 43: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Definitions social innovation – Social entrepreneurship...

Profit + Social / or, and social aims

• Muhammad Yunus = Social Entrepreneur

• Mikrofinance= Social Innovation

• Grameen Bank= Social Business

Page 44: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Future business areas

•Ageing populations - which require new ways of organizing pensions, care, mutual support, housing, urban design, mobility and new methodsfor countering isolation.

•Growing diversity of countries and cities – which demands innovative ways of organizing schooling, language training and housing

• Rising incidence of chronic diseases such as arthritis, depression, diabetes, cancers and heart diseases (which are now chronic as well as acute). These demand novel social solutions as well as new models of medical support.

Page 45: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Here We Are

Page 46: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

The Issues Facing Cairndow in 1998

• Lack of housing • Insufficient workers to fill jobs• No opportunities for further education• Lack of centre to encourage tourists to

stop and learn about Cairndow• Lack of knowledge of local history• No awareness to alternatives (e.g.

renewable energy sources)

Page 47: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Here We Are• Set up in 1998 to CONNECT

Cairndow’s past, present and future and share it with the community and the incomers

• Inter connected activities, for and by community, land, homes, history, local resources

• Built a community centre beside the famous Loch Fyne Oyster Bar to act as a focal point of activity.

• Launched Scotland’s first community owned biomass plant, opened by Minister for Energy Jim Mather

• Created 14 jobs and sustained a further

Page 48: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

www.boomerang.nl/favela/

From the Favela Painting Project, Brazil

Page 49: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.
Page 50: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Biosfärsområdet Vänerkulle

http://www.strategy-business.com/article/11110?gko=64e54&cid=20110222enews

Page 51: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

Final Thoughts• Social Capital brings a new way of looking at the

challenges that communities face and provides a lens which values human relationships and makes currently invisible resources visible

• It provides a common language to explain why we are doing what we are doing

• Helps put numbers to soft outcomes

• Can provide a framework to help replicate successes

– Look to introduce activities which help make community boundaries porous and allow access to new resources (bridging & linking)

– Indirect and informal activities are excellent ways to build reciprocal interaction and trust

Page 52: Social Capital in Theory and Practice. ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY ECONOMY.

“The real challenge is not to construct buildings, nor putting a man on the moon, but to deal with human nature “

- Björn Grinde, Chief scientist Public Health Norway