Violent Conflict and the Transformation of Social Capital: Lessons from Cambodia, Rwanda, Guatemala, and Somalia, المجلد 795World Bank Publications, 01/01/2000 - 139 من الصفحات "Armed conflict within a state weakens its social fabric and divides the population by undermining interpersonal and communal group trust, destroying the norms and values that underlie cooperation and collective action for the common good, and potentially perverting the mobilization of social relationships away from cooperative development and toward communal strife." 'Violent Conflict and the Transformation of Social Capital' is an attempt to better understand the interactions between armed conflict and social capital. The World Bank's Post-Conflict Unit (PCU) undertook an investigation of four conflict-effected countries and their changing social capital dynamics. The initial phase examined Cambodia and Rwanda as case studies and the second phase studied social capital transformations and conflict in Guatemala and Somalia. Based on the four-country project, this book discusses: changes in social capital due to conditions of conflict; the interaction between social capital and conflict; and methods for civil society, government, and international actors to nurture social capital for conflict prevention rehabilitation and reconciliation measures. The types of conflict experienced, definitions and indicators of social capital, and study conclusions are compared. In the final section, recommendations for social policy and practices emerging from these studies are presented. 'Violent Conflict and the Transformation of Social Capital' is an invaluable resource for policy and operational specialists working in conflict-effected countries. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 38
الصفحة 6
... bonding social capital . ) Weak ties ( linkages ) are more networked and associational and connect people to the outside community . Examples are links within civic associations and networks . This dimension often bridges differences in ...
... bonding social capital . ) Weak ties ( linkages ) are more networked and associational and connect people to the outside community . Examples are links within civic associations and networks . This dimension often bridges differences in ...
الصفحة 14
... Bonding ( kin , religious , and ethnic - based ) Vertical Social Capital Low social cohesion , high conflict • Exclusion • Oppressive , authoritarian state • Inequity / inequality • Corrupt , inefficienct bureaucracy • Closed society ...
... Bonding ( kin , religious , and ethnic - based ) Vertical Social Capital Low social cohesion , high conflict • Exclusion • Oppressive , authoritarian state • Inequity / inequality • Corrupt , inefficienct bureaucracy • Closed society ...
الصفحة 16
... bonding social capital link only like members , differences in access to re- sources and power may further aggravate relations and heighten tensions between those in control and those excluded . Thus , vio- lent conflict is triggered by ...
... bonding social capital link only like members , differences in access to re- sources and power may further aggravate relations and heighten tensions between those in control and those excluded . Thus , vio- lent conflict is triggered by ...
الصفحة 27
... bonding element of social life outside the family . Yet regular contacts with the pagoda , in the past as today , did not necessarily build networks of solidarity . Social capital in Cambodia has been essentially centered on primary ...
... bonding element of social life outside the family . Yet regular contacts with the pagoda , in the past as today , did not necessarily build networks of solidarity . Social capital in Cambodia has been essentially centered on primary ...
الصفحة 31
... Bonding social capital within the Khmer Rouge and the Angka allowed those groups to flourish and maintain control . The Lon Nol regime divided communities by sometimes forcing recruitment . The Khmer Rouge did its best to eliminate all ...
... Bonding social capital within the Khmer Rouge and the Angka allowed those groups to flourish and maintain control . The Lon Nol regime divided communities by sometimes forcing recruitment . The Khmer Rouge did its best to eliminate all ...
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طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities analysis areas associations bonding social capital Boroma bridging social capital build Cambodia CERFE cial civic engagement civil society civil society actors clans communities cooperation cross-cutting social capital definition of social dimensions economic growth efforts emerged ethnic exchange external facilitated families flict genocide Giti globalization growth and development Guatemala and Somalia guerrilla Hargeisa Heng Samrin horizontal social capital humanitarian Hutu and Tutsi increasing indigenous Informal networks institutions Interahamwe Khmer Rouge killings Ladino leaders linkages Lon Nol market forces market penetration Mayan mediating ment Nebaj NGOs nomic norms nurture organizational integrity organizations participation peace period Pol Pot policies political population postconflict Prasath preconflict Prey Koh Project Prunier Puerto Barrios reconciliation reconstruction role rural Rwanda Shyanda social cohesion social initiative social responsibility solidarity Somaliland structures synergy tion tive traditional trust vertical social capital village violent conflict warfare women World Bank