Investigating the physical determinants of social capital and their implications for sustainable urban development
journal contribution
posted on 2017-08-30, 15:33authored byPrimali Paranagamage, Cletus Moobela, Andrew Price, Vivek Narain Mathur
The concept of social capital is gaining increasing recognition as a concomitant for social
and economic development. Robert Putnam’s (2000) exposition of the crucial correspondence between
the decline of social capital on one hand and the economic lives of American people on the other received
wide acclaim at home and abroad. Contemporary literature on development studies is equally
replete with references to the World Bank’s subscription to the value of social capital as an important
factor in fostering sustainable development. The relationship between social capital and environmental
action has equally been acknowledged. There is also an increasing realisation that the design and
form of cities, neighbourhoods and individual buildings have significant implications on social capital
as they can affect the way people interact and bond with each other and the sense of community among
individuals (Dannenberg et al, 2003; Lindström et al, 2003). The fundamental premise is that some
urban designs encourage social ties and informal contact among residents while others violate the
evolutionary pattern of civicness within the urban setting. With all these acclaimed contributions of
the design of the urban environment, it is imperative that its role in encouraging social and fostering
sustainable development is given greater articulation and understanding. Currently, much of the work
focuses on what individuals and groups can do, rather than what the physical environment should be,
in order to encourage social ties and civicness. Thus, the aim of this paper is to identify and examine
the key physical determinants of social capital within an urban development context. The methods
used include critical analysis of scholarly work supplemented by results of a survey carried out by the
authors in the United Kingdom. The paper argues that social capital is a subject of self-organisation,
whose evolution to higher levels can be catalysed by the prevalence of a critical balance in the design
of the physical urban environment.
Funding
The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the UK’s EPSRC Sustainable
Urban Environment – Metrics, Models and Toolkits for Whole-life Sustainable Developments
(SUE-MoT) programme.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Published in
The International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic, and Social Sustainability: Annual Review
Volume
5
Issue
2
Pages
255 - 270
Citation
PARANAGAMAGE, P. et al., 2009. Investigating the physical determinants of social capital and their implications for sustainable urban development. International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic and Social Sustainability: Annual Review, 5 (2), pp.255-270.
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