• Login
    View Item 
    •   DORA Home
    • Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
    • School of Applied Social Sciences
    • View Item
    •   DORA Home
    • Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
    • School of Applied Social Sciences
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Increasing social capital to combat social exclusion; The Social Action contribution

    Thumbnail
    Date
    2001
    Author
    Boeck, T. G.;
    McCullogh, P.;
    Ward, David, 1946-
    Metadata
    Show attachments and full item record
    Description
    This chapter explores some of the findings of a TSER Project "Making New Local Policies Against Social Exclusion In European Cities" which was based on European and local networks. The importance of this chapter was that it was one of the first to highlight the contextual importance of social capital. It has policy implications for drawing together issues of social exclusion and community cohesion. It influenced local policy making and was presented in several international conferences.
    Citation : Boeck, T.G., McCullogh, P. and Ward, D. (2001) Increasing social capital to combat social exclusion; The Social Action contribution. In: The Eco-Social approach in social work, Jyvaskyla, SoPhi, pp. 84-107.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/2086/1275
    ISBN : 951-39-0914-X
    Research Group : Participation & Social Justice
    Research Group : Social Work
    Collections
    • School of Applied Social Sciences [2086]

    Related items

    Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

    • Social Inclusion, Social networks and Ethnicity: the development of the Social Inclusion Interview Schedule for young people with learning disabilities 

      Pawson, N.; Raghavan, Raghu; Small, N.; Craig, S.; Spencer, M. (Article)
    • The quest towards finding social in social entrepreneurship: Analyzing contradictory institutional logics at contexts of social entrepreneurship 

      Yeroz, H. (Conference)
      Social entrepreneurship is a heterogeneous organizational field which on the one hand builds upon highly established institutions/organizational forms and on the other continuously bears new emergent combinations. Responding ...
    • Invisible no more? Including Lesbian, Gay Bisexual and Trans People in Social Work and Social Care 

      Fish, Julie (Article)

    Submission Guide | Reporting Guide | Reporting Tool | DMU Open Access Libguide | Take Down Policy | Connect with DORA
    DMU LIbrary
     

     

    Browse

    All of DORACommunities & CollectionsAuthorsTitlesSubjects/KeywordsResearch InstituteBy Publication DateBy Submission DateThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesSubjects/KeywordsResearch InstituteBy Publication DateBy Submission Date

    My Account

    Login

    Submission Guide | Reporting Guide | Reporting Tool | DMU Open Access Libguide | Take Down Policy | Connect with DORA
    DMU LIbrary