A Pathway Forwards for the Social Capital Metaphor

Publication Type
Journal contribution (peer reviewed)
Authors
McClain, W.
Year of publication
2016
Published in
Review of Social Economy
Band/Volume
74/2
DOI
10.1080/00346764.2015.1089106
Page (from - to)
109-128
Keywords
Nachhaltigkeit
Abstract

A major topic in economics is the analysis of a broad class of phenomena associated with interpersonal relationships, a topic that originally grew from theories of “social capital.” While the concept has been instrumental in bringing increased attention to social effects on economic outcomes, it has increasingly been replaced with approaches that consider instead networks and discrete interactions rather than aggregate measures of social capital. This has been an analytical improvement, but a great deal of work remains to bring empirical validity and relevancy to social network analysis. This paper presents two important approaches for achieving this, statistical analysis and agent-based modeling, and discusses their benefits, limitations, and complementary nature. Rather than waiting for either approach to achieve an ambiguous quality of maturity, integrating statistical analysis with simulation models of networks must begin now to push the frontiers of social network analysis forward.

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