Handbook on Inequality and Social Capital

Hardback

Handbook on Inequality and Social Capital

9781802202366 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Steve McDonald, Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, North Carolina State University, US, Rochelle Côté, Associate Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada and Jing Shen, Research Affiliate, Institute for Life Course and Aging, University of Toronto, Canada
Publication Date: October 2024 ISBN: 978 1 80220 236 6 Extent: c 496 pp
Building upon the extensive and expansive tradition of research on social capital and inequality, this Handbook summarizes current social capital research and showcases cutting-edge applications. It highlights the major theoretical and methodological advancements in the field and provides a comprehensive review of the diversity of research on social capital and its relationship with the creation and maintenance of different forms of inequality.

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Building upon the extensive and expansive tradition of research on social capital and inequality, this Handbook summarizes current social capital research and showcases cutting-edge applications.

With a global range of diverse expert contributors, this Handbook explores quantitative and qualitative approaches to a broad array of substantive topics, including health, social media, disasters, crime, and employment. Chapters highlight the major theoretical and methodological advancements in the field, examining applications to affective and community-based outcomes and applications to instrumental and career-based outcomes. Ultimately, the Handbook provides a comprehensive review of the diversity of research on the resource of social capital and its relationship with the creation and maintenance of different forms of inequality.

Interdisciplinary in scope, this Handbook is a vital resource for students and scholars of sociology and social policy, economics, education, communications, management, demography, social networks, and public administration. Its innovative theorizing and novel empirical contributions will also be of use to policymakers working to reduce inequality across communities.
Critical Acclaim
‘The Handbook on Inequality and Social Capital admirably achieves its editors’ goals of comprehensiveness, inclusiveness and usefulness. Rather than attempting to define the concept of social capital, the editors embrace its multi-level, sprawling meaning in 28 chapters that cover the field, with authors from every continent and a multitude of disciplines. It should be useful for established scholars and those just entering the field.’
– Lynn Smith-Lovin, Duke University, US
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