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ARTICLES

COMPARING BONDING AND BRIDGING TIES FOR DEMOCRATIC ENGAGEMENT

Everyday use of communication technologies within social networks for civic and civil behaviors

Pages 510-528 | Received 06 Jan 2011, Accepted 08 Feb 2011, Published online: 21 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

The structure of people's social networks predicts democratic engagement. However, the relative contribution of different types of social ties to civic and civil behaviors is unclear. This paper explores the role of core networks – bonding social capital – to the role of overall network diversity – bridging social capital – for participation in formal civic institutions and informal civil behaviors. Emphasis is placed on the possible role of heterogeneity within core networks – political disagreement and the presence of nonkin ties – and on frequency of interaction, in-person and mediated: mobile phone and the Internet. This study finds that overall network diversity is a more consistent and substantive predictor of civic and civil behaviors than the size or heterogeneity of the small number of ties that make up the core network of most people. The two dominant new media used to interact with core network members – email and mobile phones – are unrelated to any of the behaviors measured. Some other media – contact in-person, postal mail, texting, instant messaging, and social network services – have an inconsistent and modest relationship to civic and civil behaviors. Findings lead to speculation that political disagreement within core networks, typically associated with lower levels of political participation, has a spillover effect that results in other forms of democratic engagement. There is evidence of glocalization; contact with core ties using new media supports local civil and civic behaviors. Internet use largely supports democratic engagement through interaction with bridging, but not bonding ties.

Notes

There is a parallel vicious cycle in which those in a context low in social capital have fewer opportunities to participate in civic and civil behavior, and this, in turn, traps individuals and communities in a context of disadvantage (Putnam Citation1993; Sampson Citation2006; Hampton Citation2010).

This list of occupations is based on the work of Nan Lin, Yang-chih Fu, and Chih-jou Jay Chen, at the Institute of Sociology, Academia Sinica.

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