Social relational capital is a term that refers to “trust” held toward others, “norms of reciprocity” expressed in terms such as “having it all”, and “networks” that are “bonds (between people)” between people. It creates “cooperation as a group” that is difficult to value in the marketplace. Reference: “Introduction to Social Capital — From Isolation to Kizuna (From Isolation to Kizuna)” by Yoji Inaba (Chuko Shinsho) [src https://www.ishes.org/keywords/2013/kwd_id 000769.html]
- Social capital = social capital.
- Network = human network = knowing the other person, being able to talk frankly psychological safety.
- Collective collaboration = teamwork.
A state in which these are present in the company leads to higher productivity than a state in which they are absent. Therefore, we consider it a type of capital similar to “having money or production equipment” (so-called capital or financial capital) or “having knowledge” (knowledge capital).
Although the literal translation SOC is sometimes chosen to avoid misunderstanding because it is sometimes mistaken for social infrastructure such as water supply. #Cooperation
merged from page SOC In layman’s terms, trust and credit from others. To avoid misunderstanding, it is better to call it “SOC”. In English, social capital social capital, but the literal translation social capital is used to refer to social infrastructure capital such as water supply.
- [[Pierre Bourdieu]]
- 1972, clearly defined 1984.
- Human capital consists of three types of capital: [[cultural capital]], [[economic capital]], and social capital.
- What is social capital [[personal connections]]?
- [[reproduction]] of [[social status]]
- The more of these capitals a person has, the more advantageous he or she is in higher education and employment, and the higher social status he or she can attain.
- James Coleman used Glenn Loury’s 1977 definition and developed and made famous the concept in the 1988 and 1990 literature
- Shinji Nozawa, “Chapter 6: Social Capital in the Formation of Human Capital … James S. Coleman,” Readings Network Theory - Family, Community, Social Capital, translated by Jun Kanemitsu, Keiso Shobo, 2006. 978-4326601943.(Originally published in Coleman, James (1988). “Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital”. American Journal of Sociology (The University of Chicago Press) 94 Suppliment: S95-S120.)
- A paper investigating the relationship between high school dropout and social relationship capital.
- Three forms of social relational capital - Obligations and Expectations - information channel - social norm
- James Coleman, Foundations of Social Theory, translated by Toshitake Kujiri, Aoki Shoten, 2004 (original 1990). ISBN 978-4250204241 (original ISBN 0674312252).
- Coleman’s social capital is a concept that corresponds to human capital.
- Human capital is personal.
- Social capital exists between people.
- Specifically, it includes three types of content: trust, human relationships such as socializing, and intermediate groups (between individuals and society, such as local community organizations and volunteer organizations).
- Shinji Nozawa, “Chapter 6: Social Capital in the Formation of Human Capital … James S. Coleman,” Readings Network Theory - Family, Community, Social Capital, translated by Jun Kanemitsu, Keiso Shobo, 2006. 978-4326601943.(Originally published in Coleman, James (1988). “Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital”. American Journal of Sociology (The University of Chicago Press) 94 Suppliment: S95-S120.)
relevance - Life Strategies - I wonder if the choice of the term human capital comes from Coleman?
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