Literature DB >> 17543707

Social capital or networks, negotiations, and norms? A neighborhood case study.

Samuel R Friedman1, Pedro Mateu-Gelabert, Richard Curtis, Carey Maslow, Melissa Bolyard, Milagros Sandoval, Peter L Flom.   

Abstract

"Social capital" has been critiqued as distracting attention from inequalities and policies that produce ill health. We support this critique insofar as social capital refers to the degree of trust and consensus in a locality, but find value in another dimension often included in the concept of social capital--social network ties and their associated communication patterns. We present a case study of Bushwick, a community of 100,000 people in Brooklyn NY, to suggest that the network aspect of "social capital" is useful to understand the active, on-the-ground processes by which residents of some neighborhoods beset by poverty, racial/ethnic subordination, and internal divisions (that themselves arise from inequalities and state policies) work out ways to defend their own and others' safety and health. We use a combination of population-representative survey data for young adults; sexual network survey data; and ethnography to show that Bushwick residents (including drug users and dealers) have used social network ties, communication, and normative pressures to reduce the extent to which they are put at risk by the drug trade and by drug-use-related HIV/AIDS in spite of conflicting interests, disparate values, and widespread distrust both of other community members and of dominant social institutions. This was done by "intravention" health communications, development of protective norms, informal negotiations, and other forms of adjustments within and among various groups--but it occurred in the absence of trust or consensus in this community. We conclude both (1) that social network interpretations of "social capital" might be better conceptualized in dialectic terms as collective action to survive in a harsh social order, and (2) that the social capital theory emphasis on trust and consensus as important causal factors for lowering drug-related risks at the community level may be a romanticized and erroneous perspective.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17543707      PMCID: PMC1995560          DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2007.02.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Prev Med        ISSN: 0749-3797            Impact factor:   5.043


  9 in total

1.  Drug use patterns and infection with sexually transmissible agents among young adults in a high-risk neighbourhood in New York City.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Peter L Flom; Benny J Kottiri; Jonathan Zenilman; Richard Curtis; Alan Neaigus; Milagros Sandoval; Thomas Quinn; Don C Des Jarlais
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2003-02       Impact factor: 6.526

2.  A critique of social capital.

Authors:  Vicente Navarro
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 1.663

3.  Commentary: Reconciling the three accounts of social capital.

Authors:  Ichiro Kawachi; Daniel Kim; Adam Coutts; S V Subramanian
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2004-07-28       Impact factor: 7.196

4.  Harnessing the power of social networks to reduce HIV risk.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Melissa Bolyard; Carey Maslow; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Milagros Sandoval
Journal:  Focus       Date:  2005-01

5.  A pilot study of the prevalence of chlamydial infection in a national household survey.

Authors:  K J Mertz; G M McQuillan; W C Levine; D H Candal; J C Bullard; R E Johnson; M E St Louis; C M Black
Journal:  Sex Transm Dis       Date:  1998-05       Impact factor: 2.830

6.  Neighborhoods and violent crime: a multilevel study of collective efficacy.

Authors:  R J Sampson; S W Raudenbush; F Earls
Journal:  Science       Date:  1997-08-15       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Stigmatized drug use, sexual partner concurrency, and other sex risk network and behavior characteristics of 18- to 24-year-old youth in a high-risk neighborhood.

Authors:  P L Flom; S R Friedman; B J Kottiri; A Neaigus; R Curtis; D C Des Jarlais; M Sandoval; J M Zenilman
Journal:  Sex Transm Dis       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 2.830

8.  Economic inequality, working-class power, social capital, and cause-specific mortality in wealthy countries.

Authors:  Carles Muntaner; John W Lynch; Marianne Hillemeier; Ju Hee Lee; Richard David; Joan Benach; Carme Borrell
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 1.663

9.  Urging others to be healthy: "intravention" by injection drug users as a community prevention goal.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Carey Maslow; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Alan Neaigus
Journal:  AIDS Educ Prev       Date:  2004-06
  9 in total
  35 in total

1.  Structural and social contexts of HIV risk Among African Americans.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Hannah L F Cooper; Andrew H Osborne
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2009-04-16       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  The role of neighborhoods in shaping perceived norms: An exploration of neighborhood disorder and norms among injection drug users in Baltimore, MD.

Authors:  Melissa A Davey-Rothwell; Dan E Siconolfi; Karin E Tobin; Carl A Latkin
Journal:  Health Place       Date:  2015-04-02       Impact factor: 4.078

3.  Rural and urban injection drug use in Puerto Rico: Network implications for human immunodeficiency virus and hepatitis C virus infection.

Authors:  Courtney Thrash; Melissa Welch-Lazoritz; Gertrude Gauthier; Bilal Khan; Roberto Abadie; Kirk Dombrowski; Sandra Miranda De Leon; Yadira Rolon Colon
Journal:  J Ethn Subst Abuse       Date:  2017-06-30       Impact factor: 1.507

4.  A stochastic agent-based model of pathogen propagation in dynamic multi-relational social networks.

Authors:  Bilal Khan; Kirk Dombrowski; Mohamed Saad
Journal:  Simulation       Date:  2014-04-01       Impact factor: 1.377

5.  Social support networks and primary care use by HIV-infected drug users.

Authors:  Megha Ramaswamy; Patricia J Kelly; Xuan Li; Karina M Berg; Alain H Litwin; Julia H Arnsten
Journal:  J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care       Date:  2012-08-04       Impact factor: 1.354

6.  Measuring Altruistic and Solidaristic Orientations Toward Others Among People Who Inject Drugs.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Enrique R Pouget; Milagros Sandoval; Yolanda Jones; Georgios K Nikolopoulos; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert
Journal:  J Addict Dis       Date:  2015

7.  Network mixing and network influences most linked to HIV infection and risk behavior in the HIV epidemic among black men who have sex with men.

Authors:  John A Schneider; Benjamin Cornwell; David Ostrow; Stuart Michaels; Phil Schumm; Edward O Laumann; Samuel Friedman
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2012-11-15       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 8.  Neighborhoods and HIV: a social ecological approach to prevention and care.

Authors:  Carl A Latkin; Danielle German; David Vlahov; Sandro Galea
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2013 May-Jun

9.  Network Firewall Dynamics and the Subsaturation Stabilization of HIV.

Authors:  Bilal Khan; Kirk Dombrowski; Mohamed Saad; Katherine McLean; Samuel Friedman
Journal:  Discrete Dyn Nat Soc       Date:  2013-01-01       Impact factor: 1.348

Review 10.  Social Network Strategies to Address HIV Prevention and Treatment Continuum of Care Among At-risk and HIV-infected Substance Users: A Systematic Scoping Review.

Authors:  Debarchana Ghosh; Archana Krishnan; Britton Gibson; Shan-Estelle Brown; Carl A Latkin; Frederick L Altice
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2017-04
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.