The capital that counts
Callahan, Sidney
SIDNEY CALLAHAN THE CAPITAL THAT COUNTS The coin that creates trust How much "social capital" do you possess? Your "ma- terial capital" in money and property can be easily ascertained by your...
...Voluntary associations beyond the family directly build up social capital- even if, most famously, the group is a bowling team...
...Other swinging parents smoked pot at home with their kids and their friends...
...Families and kin are the champion providers of these resources distributed according to need rather than according to an individual's productive labor...
...Such wealth is not like private property because relationships and the norms they engender can never be completely controlled or disposed of by any single actor...
...Relationships with a supportive network of family and friends appear to buffer stress and to keep the immune system activated...
...Common worship and rituals enacted as sacraments of charity create and renew the bonds of the human family...
...This is especially important when you are old, young, dependent, ill, or in trouble...
...All sorts of voluntary associations, the so-called "mediating institutions" that are neither government nor for-profit corporations, can indirectly produce relationships of trust and mutual obligation...
...An individual family that moves away from a neighborhood decreases the social capital of those left behind by breaking off a host of interrelationships and bonds...
...In Coleman's analysis, parents who have fewer mutually dependent relationships with other local parents possess less social capital than their children, who not only possess their intrafamily ties but also have strong bonds with their peers...
...Let's hear it for the family (all variants), the parish, the neighborhood, and voluntary associations...
...He was the famous sociologist, beloved of Catholic educators, who found the parochial schools to be superior to other systems because they possessed more social capital than their competitors...
...The Catholic church should be a veritable engine for producing social capital...
...And why is it so important...
...Then we can work to create new forms of interdependent relationships that build up trustworthiness, mutual support, and sustained attention to persons...
...Other voluntary associations are formed to serve the public good directly...
...But it also helps us understand how and why things fall apart...
...If we want to be dismissive, we can say that this focus on "social capital" simply provides a way for social scientists to recognize (at last) the nonmaterial, "spiritual" realities of life...
...Social capital, unlike other kinds of more tangible capital, consists of relationships among persons, groups, and communities that engender trust and /or mutual obligations...
...But individuals also vary in the amounts of social capital they can draw upon...
...These relationships, expectancies, and trusting obligations between persons mean that persons can draw upon social capital in order to act more effectively...
...When it comes right down to it, Cole-man's insight can be expanded...
...Cannot the phenomenal growth of the small-group movement in America be one attempt to develop substitutes for eroded forms of primordial social capital...
...The local PTA or neighborhood improvement group may generally be undersupported, but the investment of energy by the few benefits the inactive many-all those others known as free riders...
...I think it is also clear from other psycho-social research that good health is associated with the possession of social capital...
...that this analytic evaluation of human relationships and trust as a form of wealth counters materialistic and technocratic approaches to society...
...Coleman felt that in Catholic schools a child's problems were less likely to be ignored because of the belief that each person is intrinsically valuable in the sight of God...
...But what, for goodness sake, makes up your "social capital...
...Reigning individualistic ideologies of liberation, self-sufficiency, and choice can add to the destruction...
...If you believe that persons or groups can act purposefully to organize and reorganize themselves, then it is possible to begin to build up social capital...
...Affluence appears to deplete social capital because you don't need to be dependent on others...
...Make that Trust, with a capital T. with a capital T...
...You can be healthy, wealthy, and technologically skilled yet still be socially impoverished...
...Children and others who possess social capital have what Coleman calls the "sustained attention" of others directed specifically at them as whole persons rather than productive but exchangeable cogs in a corporation...
...Moreover, you pick up a lot of useful information from persons with whom you are interacting...
...Better yet, it gives us some direction for renewing and creating new forms of social capital...
...Obviously, there are as many different forms of social capital as there are different relationships among people and groups...
...In my town last year the local parents could not even agree to forbid unchaperoned parties in their homes, much less set a collective curfew for their teen-agers...
...The more closure or interdependent relationships that exist in a community, the more social capital...
...Social capital produces public order as well as general insurance for those who have it...
...I've been wrestling with the intriguing concept of "social capital" in James Coleman's classic Foundations of Social Theory...
...If everyone looks out for everyone else in a neighborhood and all abide by a norm against aggression, then children can walk to school safely and old people can go out at night...
...As ominous as the onset of the internet and computer networking might seem to many of us, could not special-interest cybercom-munities be a new form of social capital...
...By contrast, religious ideologies that impose demands for individual action directed to the good of others builds up social capital...
...This reminded me of painful struggles with our own adolescents in the '70s when some of the affluent parents in our neighborhood welcomed their adolescent children's sexual partners and allowed them to sleep together overnight...
...The more closure, the easier it becomes to enforce norms, especially intergenerational norms...
...If you possess social capital, Coleman notes, someone would be there to claim your body if you suddenly ended up in the local morgue as an accident victim...
...It's not a fair fight...
...Happily, this caring attention and investment appear to increase responsibility for the other person...
...Your relationships with others will produce the aid they are obligated to give and you can normally expect...
...Stability in an environment furthers social capital, as does the continuity of the residents in a community...
...While it is hard to measure social capital directly, it can be inferred from its powerful effects...
...Your "ma- terial capital" in money and property can be easily ascertained by your friendly mortgage officer, and your "human capital" in genetic endowment, education, and learned skills is easily estimated as well...
...Surely the grace flooding the world from the Holy Trinity is the original font of social capital, the wellspring of interpersonal trust...
...Sustained attention, trust, and personal bonds tend to increase if a child has two parents in the home, competes with fewer siblings, moves infrequently, rarely changes schools, is a member of a church community, and attends a religious school...
...Certain conditions favor the growth of social capital...
...Even the social capital inherent in family obligations and bonds can end up squandered...
...First, we can invest energy and resources in those relationships and associations (however fragile) that presently support people and work for the public good...
...He or she is less likely to drop out and more likely to achieve success...
...Shared housing for the old, alumnae and big-brother mentoring, parish nurses, nursing-home ombudsmen, and parent-run daycare cooperatives may be other efforts to find the support once provided by extended families, clans, guilds, and hometowns...
...In Coleman's theory, private effectiveness is facilitated by social capital, but it also exists as a collective public good...
...Parents who do not have interdependent ties with other parents in their community have more difficulty controlling their children...
Vol. 123 • November 1996 • No. 20