Posts Tagged ‘social networks’

 

Participation and social networks

Friday, June 24th, 2011

The RSA recently published another report in their Connected Communities series – ‘Power Lines’ – exploring: ‘How social networks power and sustain the Big Society’. My colleague Sarah wrote a post on the original paper back in September, which argued ‘that deeper and more sophisticated knowledge of social networks in local areas can lead to more strategic and effective interventions to address local problems.’

Social networks are emerging from our research as critical to shaping individuals and the resources and opportunities they have to participate. The RSA’s latest paper has some thought provoking findings that link very closely in places to our work.

‘Power Lines’ is based on an analysis of social networks in New Cross Gate in south London. A selection of the key findings included:

  • ‘Those with fewer local connections in general were more likely to be isolated from local influence’;
  • ‘Being retired, unemployed, and living in certain areas, all made it more likely that people would be disconnected from local influence’;
  • ‘Even within the relatively small area [there was] considerable variation. Some areas had much denser social networks than others’;
  • ‘Poorly connected areas are characterised by a few very well connected individuals, and many poorly connected people. Well-connected neighbourhoods are composed of individuals who have similar amounts of connections as others’;
  • ‘Community networks are resilient when they have numerous connections both internally and externally’.

The report’s overarching argument is that the government’s current approach to the Big Society is focused too much on ‘citizen-led service delivery’ and not enough on ‘utilising and building people’s social networks’. These social networks – the authors argue – ‘largely determine our ability to create change and influence decisions that affect us’.

They suggest that participation is often defined too narrowly, focusing on ‘so-called “active” citizens’, who are regularly engaged in public participation and are often regarded as the ‘vision of what it is to be empowered and to have influence’.  Rather, the authors argue that in order to increase individuals’ access to local power, the focus ‘must first be on fostering overall social connections and neighbourliness’.

This argument, I feel, fits well with both the approach of our research and our findings. It suggests that rather than focusing on trying to increase participation in narrowly defined activities, we must take a step back and look from the perspective of individuals at the factors and forces that shape participation as a whole, of which social networks are a key part. Then, by focusing on building these resources and opportunities, we can begin to empower citizens to feel able to participate – if and where they wish to – and to feel that their involvement will make a difference.

Social networks and community regeneration

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

The Royal Society for the Encouragement of the Arts, Manufacturers and Commerce (RSA) has just released an interim report on its Connected Communities project: Connected Communities: How social networks power and sustain the Big Society. This three-year project is exploring the value of a social-network approach to understanding communities and how they ‘tick’. The communities in question are in South East London and Bristol.

The report’s authors argue that deeper and more sophisticated knowledge of social networks in local areas can lead to more strategic and effective interventions to address local problems. They suggest that policies and programmes informed by a social network analysis could be more effective at linking the most and least connected groups; target and serve those who are most isolated in an area; encourage ‘pro-social’ behaviour change; and improve channels of communication between local authorities, public service providers, community organisations and residents themselves by using individuals and organisations that are already well-connected to help disseminate knowledge.

This is interesting stuff, all the more so because it raises a couple of questions for me. First, the study focuses more on the density and ‘form’ of the networks (how many links are there between one group of people and another), than on the content (what is it that actually brings people together), and quality of the relationships. But as anyone who has ever felt lonely in a room full of people knows, it’s not the quantity of the social connections that matter for one’s sense of well-being but the quality of those connections. Is increasing the number of social links and the diversity of people belonging to a network enough to bring about social change? How do we account for things like intimacy, reciprocity, and power relations in a social network approach to research and community regeneration?

Second, the project, rightly, presents social connectedness as an important end in itself, but how will increasing and strengthening social links address the structural causes of social isolation and weak social networks such as poverty and unemployment?

The second year of the Connected Communities project will test small-scale social interventions with residents in the research areas. It will be interesting to see how this practical, action research stage of the project builds on the theories and analysis introduced in this thought-provoking report, and whether it sheds any light on the questions I’ve raised here.