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Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture.

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Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture. / Welshman, John.
In: Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health, Vol. 126, No. 6, 11.2006, p. 268-274.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Welshman, J 2006, 'Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture.', Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health, vol. 126, no. 6, pp. 268-274. https://doi.org/10.1177/1466424006070488

APA

Vancouver

Welshman J. Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture. Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health. 2006 Nov;126(6):268-274. doi: 10.1177/1466424006070488

Author

Welshman, John. / Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture. In: Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health. 2006 ; Vol. 126, No. 6. pp. 268-274.

Bibtex

@article{dbc27c3e1930404690d59ee2f7b536c1,
title = "Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture.",
abstract = "Social capital has been seen as having a positive effect on health, and the concept of social capital has been viewed as of central importance to debates about healthy, sustainable communities. More generally, behaviour and its relationship with health has become much more central to policy-making, as illustrated in the Choosing Health White Paper (2005), and the concept of social capital has been one influence on the concept of social exclusion. Robert Putnam{\textquoteright}s arguments, both those expressed in Making Democracy Work (1993) and the revised version seen in Bowling Alone (2000) have been taken up by numerous social scientists and policy-makers. But despite the explicitly historical perspective that Putnam employs in Bowling Alone in particular, the history of social capital remains rather neglected in the available literature. This article is concerned with providing a historical perspective on social capital, especially the ways in which social investigators have viewed the relationships between health, poverty and behaviour. The article puts social capital alongside that of {\textquoteleft}underclass{\textquoteright} concepts such as the culture of poverty thesis, and examines how the latter has been invented and reinvented in the UK and the USA over the last 120 years. It argues that there are important similarities between the culture of poverty and social capital, but also significant differences, and these have implications for current policy initiatives. One way of analysing concepts like social capital and social exclusion more rigorously is by locating them within this longer-term history of social investigation, in which debates about health, poverty, and culture have been of key significance.",
keywords = "Culture • history • Robert Putnam • social capital • underclass",
author = "John Welshman",
year = "2006",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1177/1466424006070488",
language = "English",
volume = "126",
pages = "268--274",
journal = "Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health",
issn = "1476-9042",
publisher = "Royal Society for the Promotion of Health",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Searching for social capital : historical perspectives on health, poverty, and culture.

AU - Welshman, John

PY - 2006/11

Y1 - 2006/11

N2 - Social capital has been seen as having a positive effect on health, and the concept of social capital has been viewed as of central importance to debates about healthy, sustainable communities. More generally, behaviour and its relationship with health has become much more central to policy-making, as illustrated in the Choosing Health White Paper (2005), and the concept of social capital has been one influence on the concept of social exclusion. Robert Putnam’s arguments, both those expressed in Making Democracy Work (1993) and the revised version seen in Bowling Alone (2000) have been taken up by numerous social scientists and policy-makers. But despite the explicitly historical perspective that Putnam employs in Bowling Alone in particular, the history of social capital remains rather neglected in the available literature. This article is concerned with providing a historical perspective on social capital, especially the ways in which social investigators have viewed the relationships between health, poverty and behaviour. The article puts social capital alongside that of ‘underclass’ concepts such as the culture of poverty thesis, and examines how the latter has been invented and reinvented in the UK and the USA over the last 120 years. It argues that there are important similarities between the culture of poverty and social capital, but also significant differences, and these have implications for current policy initiatives. One way of analysing concepts like social capital and social exclusion more rigorously is by locating them within this longer-term history of social investigation, in which debates about health, poverty, and culture have been of key significance.

AB - Social capital has been seen as having a positive effect on health, and the concept of social capital has been viewed as of central importance to debates about healthy, sustainable communities. More generally, behaviour and its relationship with health has become much more central to policy-making, as illustrated in the Choosing Health White Paper (2005), and the concept of social capital has been one influence on the concept of social exclusion. Robert Putnam’s arguments, both those expressed in Making Democracy Work (1993) and the revised version seen in Bowling Alone (2000) have been taken up by numerous social scientists and policy-makers. But despite the explicitly historical perspective that Putnam employs in Bowling Alone in particular, the history of social capital remains rather neglected in the available literature. This article is concerned with providing a historical perspective on social capital, especially the ways in which social investigators have viewed the relationships between health, poverty and behaviour. The article puts social capital alongside that of ‘underclass’ concepts such as the culture of poverty thesis, and examines how the latter has been invented and reinvented in the UK and the USA over the last 120 years. It argues that there are important similarities between the culture of poverty and social capital, but also significant differences, and these have implications for current policy initiatives. One way of analysing concepts like social capital and social exclusion more rigorously is by locating them within this longer-term history of social investigation, in which debates about health, poverty, and culture have been of key significance.

KW - Culture • history • Robert Putnam • social capital • underclass

U2 - 10.1177/1466424006070488

DO - 10.1177/1466424006070488

M3 - Journal article

VL - 126

SP - 268

EP - 274

JO - Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health

JF - Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health

SN - 1476-9042

IS - 6

ER -