Title: Social networks in transnational and virtual communities
1Social networks in transnational and virtual
communities
Nathan Vivian Fay Sudweeks School of Information
Technology Murdoch University, Perth,
Australia n.vivian_at_murdoch.edu.au sudweeks_at_murdoch
.edu.au
2Question
- Why do some communities survive and some
disintegrate? - or more importantly
- How are todays communities created and
maintained?
3Social Networks
- Social networks can explain how communities are
created and maintained. - Individuals create interpersonal bonds with
others within their social network that are
interwoven with the social institutions of their
society. - These interwoven patterns and matrices can
facilitate the success or failure of societies
and organisations that depend on these networks.
4Social Networks
- Social ties are not fixed. Networks are
constantly being socially constructed and altered
by their members. - Interpersonal relations within social networks
cut across traditional boundaries such as
neighbourhood, workplace, kinship and class.
5Social Networks
- Sociologist in the 1950s anticipated
disconnectedness, loss of community and weakly
supportive relationships due to rapid
modernisation. - Yet the realisation of the Internet and modern
technologies have provided for community creation
well beyond expectation.
6Social Networks
- How have social networks facilitated communities?
- A proposed framework helps to explain how social
networks facilitate the creation and maintenance
of communities regardless of size and
communication medium. - In particular we look at transnational
communities and virtual communities.
7Transnational Communities
- Migration is a process that both depends on and
creates social networks (Portes, 1995) - Transnational communities are characterised by
perpetual back and forth border crossing
movements among migrants. - Communities whose mobility is celebrated as being
neither here nor there (Portes) - Communities whose mobility is a drama of
displacement, destitution, and ultimate
homelessness (Torres-Saillant)
8Virtual Communities
- The online social network provided a venue for
storytelling, showcasing, projects and best
practices that could be leveraged to create new
knowledge resources (Kimball Rheingold, 2000) - People who are geographically separated or on
the road need a way of maintaining contact,
whether they are part of a large community or an
organisational project team. - Virtual settlements.
9Basic Connections
Relationships
Identity/ Belonging
Social Spaces
Groups/Teams
Social Structures
Key Members
Social Capital
Social Formation
10Social Spaces
- Social spaces are
- place-centered (embedded in particular location)
- trans-territorial (geographically disparate but
intensely connected) - and social spaces
- are where individuals first meet and develop
contacts - provide the initial medium to form and maintain
basic connections which enable individuals to
create relationships - create the identity or belongingness of the
community (e.g. campus, shopping mall, town
squares).
11Encourages the notion of belonging, especially in
respect to a community
Basic Connections
Can enable individuals to create
Provides the initial medium and maintains
Members often have a feeling of belonging and
therefore come back
Meeting areas of common interest provide for
Relationships
Identity/ Belonging
Social Spaces
Communicate through the common medium
Form/Change
Strengthens
Assist in forming strong bonds with members of
the community
Groups/Teams
Effect of relational embeddedness
Key members often control and utilise different
forms of communication to maintain their
networks, hence social capital
Embedded community members affect
Social Structures
Key Members
A direct and sometimes transparent relationship
Embedded community members mobilise
Social Capital
Social Formation
12Social Formation
- Relationships exist between individuals or
between groups which are mostly dynamic but
strengthen a sense of identity and belonging in
groups and teams. - Notion of community consciousness
- These groups are often in different social
arenas, but are identifiable in any community. - The key members of these groups are those who are
stakeholders within their community.
13Social Formation
- Key members use communication and social spaces
to maintain their networks. - Community members are embedded in the community
in two ways - how they relate personally to each other
(relational embeddedness) - how social relationships affect social structures
(structural embeddedness)
14Encourages the notion of belonging, especially in
respect to a community
Basic Connections
Can enable individuals to create
Provides the initial medium and maintains
Members often have a feeling of belonging and
therefore come back
Meeting areas of common interest provide for
Relationships
Identity/ Belonging
Social Spaces
Communicate through the common medium
Form/Change
Strengthens
Assist in forming strong bonds with members of
the community
Groups/Teams
Effect of relational embeddedness
Key members often control and utilise different
forms of communications to maintain their
networks, hence social capital
Embedded community members affect
Social Structures
Key Members
A direct and sometimes transparent relationship
Embedded community members mobilise
Social Capital
Social Formation
15Social Capital
- Social capital is defined as a players level of
cooperativeness within a social network. - A social network is a set of players and a
pattern of exchange of information and/or goods
among these players. - Social capital is developed and maintained over
time through regular communication, participation
in events and membership of associations. - Participation alone is not capital building
reciprocation is required.
16Encourages the notion of belonging, especially in
respect to a community
Basic Connections
Can enable individuals to create
Provides the initial medium and maintains
Members often have a feeling of belonging and
therefore come back
Meeting areas of common interest provide for
Relationships
Identity/ Belonging
Social Spaces
Communicate through the common medium
Form/Change
Strengthens
Assist in forming strong bonds with members of
the community
Groups/Teams
Effect of relational embeddedness
Key members often control and utilise different
forms of communication to maintain their
networks, hence social capital
Embedded community members affect
Social Structures
Key Members
A direct and sometimes transparent relationship
Embedded community members mobilise
Social Capital
Social Formation
17Encourages the notion of belonging, especially in
respect to a community
Basic Connections
Can enable individuals to create
Provides the initial medium and maintains
Members often have a feeling of belonging and
therefore come back
Meeting areas of common interest provide for
Relationships
Identity/ Belonging
Social Spaces
Communicate through the common medium
Form/Change
Strengthens
Assist in forming strong bonds with members of
the community
Groups/Teams
Effect of relational embeddedness
Key members often control and utilise different
forms of communications to maintain their
networks, hence social capital
Embedded community members affect
Social Structures
Key Members
A direct and sometimes transparent relationship
Embedded community members mobilise
Social Capital
Social Formation
18Transnational Communities
- Not only individual people migrate, but their
social networks migrate also. - Social networks are crucial for finding jobs,
accommodation, psychological support, social and
economic information. - Migration is a process of network building, which
reinforces social relationships across space.
19Virtual Communities
- Virtual community members bring offline values
and interactions in their online communities. - Many believe that virtual communities are
sociologically the same as their brick and
mortar counterparts.
20Conclusions
- Social networks do not depend on one relationship
or on any particular social space in which people
meet. - Social networks depend on the process of creating
relationships, embedding oneself into the social
structure whether the structure be
trans-territorial or virtually co-located and
the ability to mobilise social capital.
21References
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22References
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immigration. In A. Portes (Ed.), - Economic Sociology and the Sociology of
Immigration A conceptual Overview (pp. 1-41).
New York Russell Sage Foundation. - Portes, A. (1996). Global Villagers The Rise of
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- Tarrow, S. (1998). Power in Movement Social
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