Abstract

This paper examines the causal relationship between social capital and development in micro settings at a time of violent conflict by taking a case study of six villages in the north of Sri Lanka. The rich and vast literature on social capital has documented the causal linkages between social capital and the various social and economic outcomes, which, among others include development, better functioning democracies, ethnic harmony, and so on. This particular paper is focusing on micro settings to seek whether social capital is a significant factor of development in such settings, especially, at a time when these settings have gone through violent conflict, where people have been set apart by cleavages of ethnicity and/or religion. This requires understanding and measuring both social capital and development in a manner sensitive and meaningful for micro settings. Relatively, few studies show how this can be achieved and hence the research gap. This study finds that bonding social capital is a strong factor in development in terms of supporting agriculture even at a time of conflict. Bonding social capital is important in converting natural resources into economic assets which improve the level of development. Bridging social capital has had historical significance not only in agriculture but also in many other aspects. An equally important objective of the paper is to illustrate how a mixed-method approach of using both qualitative and quantitative techniques can be used for social capital research. Most studies on social capital depend either on quantitative or qualitative methods and fail to capture the intricate dynamics between components of social capital and development outcomes. This particular study shows how social capital can be measured using the indicators that local people suggest, so that, the indexes developed actually measure what is important for the people.

Highlights

  • The research study, reported in this article, became a reality at a particular historical juncture in the long drawn-out violent conflict between the government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)

  • In similar conflict-affected environments, there have been studies which have investigated the relevance of social capital for development (Colletta & Cullen, 2000; Colletta et al, 2001)

  • In Sri Lanka, relatively little was known about the dynamics of conflict and social capital for development at the village level

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

The research study, reported in this article, became a reality at a particular historical juncture in the long drawn-out violent conflict between the government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The development discourse in Sri Lanka is built around state intervention and, to some extent, on the contribution of nongovernmental organisations This particular study draws attention on hitherto relatively unexplored aspect on social factors in development in a situation of violent conflict. This study was developed to investigate the potential causal relationships between social capital and development in six selected villages in northern Sri Lanka[1] Another important goal of this paper is to highlight the significance of a mixed method approach to study social capital and development outcomes. The beneficial outcomes through stocks of social capital may not be arising from social capital alone

METHODOLOGY
Findings
Availability of drinking water
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call