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While various aspects of the concept have been approached by all social science fields, some trace the modern usage of the term to Jane Jacobs in the 1960s. However, she did not explicitly define a term social capital but used it in an article with a reference to the value of networks. The first cohesive exposition of the term was by Pierre Bourdieu in 1972 (though clear formulation in his work can be traced to 1984), and subsequently picked up initially by James Coleman and then others. For a time in the late 1990s, the concept was highly fashionable, with the World Bank devoting a research programme to it, and the concept achieving public awareness through Robert Putnam 's 2000 book, '' Bowling Alone ''. ROOTS The concept that underlies social capital is old. Philosophers who emphasized the relation between pluralistic associational life and democracy implicitly used it as early as the 19th century. These theorists include James Madison (The Federalist), Alexis de Tocqueville (Democracy in America), and, many authors in the dominant, pluralist tradition in American political science. Some examples of social capital include PTA's, girl/boy scouts, school boards, bowling leagues, internet networks, and even extreme groups like the KKK or white supremacy groups, although these groups create "bad" social capital that can have negative effects. These groups can help build and break societies because of their bridging/bonding behavior. By increasing the amount of human interaction, people are more likely to help one another and later become more politically involved. Recently there has been much discussion of email and online communities and whether they help build social capital. Some argue that they may bridge people together but do not bond them. Another interesting debate among political scientists has regarded whether email helps produce social capital within the work place or diminish it. DEFINITIONS In ''The Forms of Capital'' (, Cultural Capital and social capital. He defines social capital as "the aggregate of the actual or potential resources which are linked to possession of a durable network of more or less institutionalized relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition." Social capital "refers to the collective value of all ' Social Network s' and the inclinations that arise from these networks to do things for each other," according to Robert Putnam , author of ''Bowling Alone'' and the concept's leading exponent (though not its originator). According to Putnam and his followers, social capital is a key component to building and maintaining Democracy . Putnam says that social capital is declining in the United States. This is seen in lower levels of trust in government and lower levels of civic participation. Putnam also says that television and urban sprawl have had a significant role in making America far less connected. , Flap, Putnam and Eriksson as noted in Lin's book ''Social Capital'' (2001; Cambridge University Press). Francis Fukuyama described social capital as the existence of a certain (i.e. specific) set of informal Values or norms shared among members of a group that permit cooperation among them. According to social capitalist Caira Nakasone , the ambiguity over the definition of Social Capital does not occur within the definition of “social” but in the doubt of “capital”. That is in the causal and more over “effective” nature of social networks which inhibits agreement over a concrete, measurable form of the theory. Another way of examining the concept is to take the two words that comprise that. Social- meaning relating to human society and how society is organized and Capital defined as: economics material wealth in the form of money or property, identifies the meaning as societal wealth. Studies show that war generates social capital and that social capital can be divided along generational lines. For example the World War II generation has sustained their increased levels of civic engagement and remains the faction most likely to participate in activities such as voting and volunteerism. Nahpiet and Ghoshal in their examination of the role of social capital in the creation of intellectual capital, suggest that social capital should be considered in terms of three clusters: structural, relational and cognitive. Carlos García Timón describes that the structural dimensions of social capital relate to an individual ability to make weak and strong ties to others within a system. The differences between weak and strong ties are explained by Granovetter (1973). The relational dimension focuses on the character of the connection between individuals. This is best characterized through trust of others and their cooperation and the identification an individual has within a network. Hazleton and Kennan (2000) added a third angle, that of communication. Communication is needed to access and use social capital through exchanging information, identify problems and solutions and manage conflict. According to Boisot ( 1995 ) and Boland and Tensaki (1995), meaningful communication requires at least some sharing context between the parties to such exchange. A problem with the term social capital is its widely differing definitions. Some political scientists use the term as identical the idea of Civil Society and trust. To others, social capital has a separate meaning. Differences in the use of the term have radical consequences on society. FORM OF CAPITAL The term " Capital " is used by analogy with other forms of economic capital, as social capital is argued to have similar (although less measurable) benefits. The analogy with capital is however misleading to the extent that, unlike traditional forms of capital, social capital is not depleted by use, but in fact depleted by non-use ("use it or lose it"). In this respect it is similar to the now well-established economic concept of Human Capital . Bonding and bridging In his pioneering study, ''Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community'' (Simon & Schuster 2000), Harvard political scientist Robert D. Putnam wrote: "Henry Ward Beecher's advice a century ago to "multiply picnics" is not entirely ridiculous today. We should do this, ironically, not because it will be good for America — though it will be — but because it will be good for us." Putnam is not suggesting here that we must expand an already stable level of networking and civil interaction. He has found an overall decline in social capital in America over the past fifty years, a trend that may have significant implications for American society. Putnam speaks of two main components of the concept: bonding social capital and bridging social capital. The former refers to the value assigned to social networks between homogeneous groups of people and the latter to that of social networks between socially heterogeneous groups. Typical examples are that criminal gangs create bonding social capital, while Choir s and bowling clubs (hence the title, as Putnam lamented their decline) create bridging social capital. Bridging social capital is argued to have a host of other benefits for societies, governments, individuals, and communities; Putnam likes to note that joining an organization cuts in half an individual's chance of dying within the next year. The distinction is useful in highlighting how social capital may not always be beneficial for society as a whole (though it is always an asset for those individuals and groups involved). Horizontal networks of individual citizens and groups that enhance community productivity and cohesion are said to be positive social capital assets whereas self-serving exclusive gangs and hierarchical patronage systems that operate at cross purposes to Societal interests can be thought of as negative social capital burdens on society. The concept of social capital in a Chinese social context has been closely linked with the concept of Guanxi . SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
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