This article conceptualizes social capital in communicative terms to describe the social resources available to members of one suburb in Christchurch, New Zealand, as they seek to recover from a natural disaster. It notes how communicative social capital was distributed unequally and frequently experienced as in deficit or as inaccessible. The idea of community was a powerful focal point for residents, but there was little evidence that social connectedness at this level provided the resources for civic engagement more generally. The idea of the city that arose out of people’s shared ideals and investment in collective civic institutions appeared to be still broken three years on from the initial disaster
This article analyzes the impact of socio-natural disasters on social capital at a local level, stud...
© 2018 This study examines the role of social connectedness, or 'social capital’, in mediating the d...
There is a critical strand of literature suggesting that there are no ‘natural’ disasters (Abramovit...
On the 4th of September 2010 the South Island city of Christchurch, New Zealand was struck by a magn...
Garrett Hardin's 1968 essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" famously decried the vulnerability of finit...
Disaster scholarship has resurrected interest in social capital, and it has become well established ...
This study followed two similarly affected, but socio-economically disparate suburbs as residents re...
ABSTRACT Researchers argue that social networks based on shared values, trust, and norms can facilit...
This study aims to depict the people affected by flood in one village in Garut, West Java. The commu...
According to the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (2005), between 1994 and 2003 ...
Social capital plays a significant role in post-disaster community participation and disaster recove...
The theories and ideas of social capital have been incorporated in various disciplines, but few stud...
The social dimension of disaster recovery has, in recent times, gained attention in the literature ...
The concept of social capital generally refers to the assets that reside within social actors\u27 re...
theoretical Framework The concept of social capital offers an approach to framing the phenomena of c...
This article analyzes the impact of socio-natural disasters on social capital at a local level, stud...
© 2018 This study examines the role of social connectedness, or 'social capital’, in mediating the d...
There is a critical strand of literature suggesting that there are no ‘natural’ disasters (Abramovit...
On the 4th of September 2010 the South Island city of Christchurch, New Zealand was struck by a magn...
Garrett Hardin's 1968 essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" famously decried the vulnerability of finit...
Disaster scholarship has resurrected interest in social capital, and it has become well established ...
This study followed two similarly affected, but socio-economically disparate suburbs as residents re...
ABSTRACT Researchers argue that social networks based on shared values, trust, and norms can facilit...
This study aims to depict the people affected by flood in one village in Garut, West Java. The commu...
According to the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (2005), between 1994 and 2003 ...
Social capital plays a significant role in post-disaster community participation and disaster recove...
The theories and ideas of social capital have been incorporated in various disciplines, but few stud...
The social dimension of disaster recovery has, in recent times, gained attention in the literature ...
The concept of social capital generally refers to the assets that reside within social actors\u27 re...
theoretical Framework The concept of social capital offers an approach to framing the phenomena of c...
This article analyzes the impact of socio-natural disasters on social capital at a local level, stud...
© 2018 This study examines the role of social connectedness, or 'social capital’, in mediating the d...
There is a critical strand of literature suggesting that there are no ‘natural’ disasters (Abramovit...