Social Capital Theory
Overview
Social capital theory explains how the structure and quality of social relationships generate resources, trust, and advantage for individuals, groups, and communities. Three major traditions — Coleman (rational closure), Putnam (civic engagement), and Burt (structural holes) — offer complementary lenses on how networks create and constrain value.
When to Use
- Assessing whether a network provides access to diverse information or redundant support
- Evaluating trust, reciprocity, and cooperation within communities or organizations
- Identifying brokerage opportunities (structural holes) in inter-organizational networks
- Analyzing why some communities or teams outperform others despite similar resources
When NOT to Use
- When network data is unavailable and analysis would be purely speculative
- When individual-level human capital (skills, knowledge) is the primary explanatory variable
- When the research question concerns macro-structural inequality (use Bourdieu's field theory instead)
Assumptions
IRON LAW: Social capital can be both an asset AND a constraint — dense
networks enable trust but restrict access to novel information. Any
analysis that treats social capital as purely beneficial ignores the
well-documented dark side of strong ties and closure.
Key assumptions:
- Relationships are resources — they provide information, influence, and solidarity
- Network structure matters independent of individual attributes
- Social capital is not equally accessible — it depends on position in the network
- The value of social capital is context-dependent (closure helps in some settings, brokerage in others)
Methodology
Step 1: Define the Network and Level of Analysis
Specify the actors (individuals, teams, organizations, communities) and the relationships being analyzed (advice, trust, resource exchange).
Step 2: Assess Network Structure
| Concept | Theorist | Description | Value Created |
|---|
| Bonding capital | Putnam | Dense ties within a group | Trust, solidarity, mutual aid |
| Bridging capital | Putnam | Ties across diverse groups | Access to novel information, broader identity |
| Network closure | Coleman | Dense, closed networks with shared norms | Norm enforcement, trust, sanctioning |
| Structural holes | Burt | Gaps between non-redundant contacts | Information arbitrage, brokerage, control |
Step 3: Evaluate Trust and Norms
Assess the level of generalized trust, reciprocity norms, and sanctioning mechanisms present in the network.
Step 4: Identify Benefits and Constraints
Map the advantages and dark-side effects of the current network configuration.
Output Format
markdown
## Social Capital Analysis: [Context]
### Network Definition
- Actors: [who is in the network]
- Relationship type: [what ties are being analyzed]
- Level: [individual / group / community]
### Structural Assessment
|-----------|--------------|-------------|
| Bonding capital | [H/M/L] | [effect] |
| Bridging capital | [H/M/L] | [effect] |
| Network closure | [H/M/L] | [effect] |
| Structural holes | [many/few] | [brokerage opportunities] |
### Trust and Norms
- Generalized trust level: [H/M/L]
- Reciprocity norms: [strong/weak]
- Sanctioning mechanisms: [formal/informal/absent]
### Benefits and Dark Side
|----------|------------------------|
| [benefit from current structure] | [cost or limitation] |
### Recommendations
1. [How to optimize the bonding-bridging balance]
2. [Structural hole opportunities to pursue]
3. [Dark-side risks to mitigate]
Gotchas
- Bonding and bridging are not opposites — effective networks need both in the right mix
- Burt's structural holes and Coleman's closure are complements at different levels, not competing theories
- The "dark side" of social capital includes groupthink, exclusion of outsiders, and excessive obligations
- Putnam's macro-level civic social capital does not map directly to Burt's individual-level brokerage
- Do not conflate social capital with social network analysis — SNA is a method, social capital is a theory
- Measurement is notoriously difficult; specify clearly whether you measure structure, trust, or both
References
- Burt, R. S. (1992). Structural Holes: The Social Structure of Competition. Harvard University Press.
- Coleman, J. S. (1988). Social capital in the creation of human capital. American Journal of Sociology, 94, S95-S120.
- Putnam, R. D. (2000). Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. Simon & Schuster.
- Granovetter, M. (1973). The strength of weak ties. American Journal of Sociology, 78(6), 1360-1380.