Social capital and community-driven development: A multi-group analysis of migrant and indigenous informal settlements in Greater Accra, Ghana

IF 6.5 1区 经济学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Habitat International Pub Date : 2024-02-03 DOI:10.1016/j.habitatint.2024.103016
Beatrice Eyram Afi Ziorklui , Seth Asare Okyere , Matthew Abunyewah , Stephen Leonard Mensah , Louis Kusi Frimpong
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Abstract

In sub-Saharan African cities, community-driven development has emerged as a collective response to entrenched socio-spatial inequalities and inappropriate local development planning responses to the challenges of informal settlements. Social capital is considered to stimulate such community-driven initiatives. There are also claims that social capital can impede the sustainable development of informal settlements. Yet, none of these streams pay due attention to what forms of social capital and what urban social context social capital influences community-led informal settlement improvement. This paper sought to examine the influential role of bonding and bridging social capital on community-driven development (CDD) by comparing indigenous and migrant urban informal settlements in Accra, Ghana. Drawing on a quantitative study with 300 participants in two informal settlements and using a robust multi-group analysis, the findings revealed that bonding social capital had a positive effect on CDD (β = 0.27, p = 0.05) in the indigenous informal settlement (Abese Quarter) but insignificant relationship (β = -0.33, p = 0.36) in the migrant informal settlement (Old-Tulaku). Contrarily, bridging social capital had a positive effect on the migrant (β = 0.87, p = 0.05) but not on indigenous informal settlements (β = 0.07, p = 0.09). The paper concludes that the exploitation of social capital in bottom-up informal settlement improvement is more nuanced, and context-specific applications are imperative for research and practice. For policymakers and built environment professionals, the paper suggests leveraging social capital as a means (not ends) for building formal-informal collaborations through the co-production of bottom-up initiatives for inclusive and sustainable improvements to maximize the positives and minimize the negatives.

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社会资本与社区驱动的发展:对加纳大阿克拉地区移民和原住民非正规住区的多群体分析
在撒哈拉以南非洲城市,社区驱动的发展已成为对根深蒂固的社会空间不平等和地方发展规划应对非正规住区挑战不当的集体回应。社会资本被认为可以刺激这种社区驱动的举措。也有人声称,社会资本会阻碍非正规住区的可持续发展。然而,这些观点都没有充分关注何种形式的社会资本以及何种城市社会背景下的社会资本会对社区主导的非正规居住区改善产生影响。本文试图通过比较加纳阿克拉的本地和外来城市非正规居住区,研究纽带型和桥梁型社会资本对社区驱动型发展(CDD)的影响作用。通过对两个非正规住区的 300 名参与者进行定量研究,并采用稳健的多组分析方法,研究结果表明,在本地非正规住区(Abese Quarter),纽带型社会资本对社区驱动发展(CDD)有积极影响(β = 0.27,p = 0.05),但在移民非正规住区(Old-Tulaku),这种关系并不显著(β = -0.33,p = 0.36)。相反,桥梁型社会资本对移民有积极影响(β = 0.87,p = 0.05),但对本地非正规住区没有积极影响(β = 0.07,p = 0.09)。本文的结论是,在自下而上的非正规住区改善过程中,对社会资本的利用存在更多的细微差别,针对具体情况的应用对于研究和实践来说势在必行。对于政策制定者和建筑环境专业人士来说,本文建议利用社会资本作为手段(而非目的),通过共同制定自下而上的包容性和可持续改善措施,建立正式-非正式合作关系,从而最大限度地发挥积极作用,减少消极影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
151
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: Habitat International is dedicated to the study of urban and rural human settlements: their planning, design, production and management. Its main focus is on urbanisation in its broadest sense in the developing world. However, increasingly the interrelationships and linkages between cities and towns in the developing and developed worlds are becoming apparent and solutions to the problems that result are urgently required. The economic, social, technological and political systems of the world are intertwined and changes in one region almost always affect other regions.
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