Title: Integrating the NRE Project Insights
1Integrating the NRE Project Insights
- Bill Reimer
- reimer_at_vax2.concordia.ca
- 2006/04/29
2Lessons (1)
- Working Proposition
- Community Capacity is a function of assets (or
liabilities) and the ability of communities to
recognize and (re)organize those assets to
achieve their valued outcomes.
3- OUTCOMES
- Economic wealth
- Social and political inclusion
- Social Cohesion
- Environmental security
- Social and self-worth
- Health
- Personal Security
- ASSETS and LIABILITIES
- Economic Capital
- Human Skills and Abilities
- Social Capital
- Natural Resources
outcomes can become new assets and liabilities
4(No Transcript)
5Gaps
- Formal-Informal economy
- Rural women relatively disadvantaged by
participation in informal economy - Municipal financing
- Resources greater constraint on discretion than
autonomy - Social capital
- Relational frameworks and context related to
particular outcomes - Capacity
- Potential, level and group dependent, outcomes
may be positive or negative
6Activities
- Social capital papers (2)
- Capacity paper
- Municipal finances paper
- Social economy paper
- Social support paper
- CSD Trajectories
- Cleaning and archiving data, documentation, 2006
census data, NRE Scrap book
7Integrating the NRE Project Insights
- The Canadian Rural Revitalization Foundation
- nre.concordia.ca
- www.crrf.ca
- 2006/04/29
8Normative Systems
Market-based Contractual, short-term, supply and
demand E.g. commerce, labour, housing, trade
Bureaucratic
Market
Bureaucratic-based Rationalized roles,
principles E.g. government, law, corporations
Associative-based Shared interests E.g.
recreation, charity, religious groups
Associative
Communal
Communal-based Generalized reciprocity,
identity, birth E.g. families, cultural groups,
gangs
9Social Capital in Action
10Lessons (2) Social Capital
- Available social capital is not always used
- Opportunities for community development
- Social capital types most often used in
combination - Indirect and concerted programs may be more
effective - Context matters
- Local consultation and control are critical
11Learning (3) SoKp and Soco
12Learning (4) Social economy
- Social economy mostly small, volunteer-based
organizations in our sites - Site contexts are related to the types of social
economy organizations - Use of social capital and participation in social
economy are related (variously)
13CSD Trajectories - Employment
14Learning (5) - Municipalities
- Access to resources major challenge
- Increasing taxes major obstacle to fund-raising
in small municipalities - Small municipalities face different challenges
than large
15Learning Informal Economy
- Functions of Informal Economy
- Safety net
- Buffer for structural changes
- Capacity builder
- Support for social inclusion
- Formal-Informal economy mix
- Self-employment increases womens informal
economy load, but decreases mens - Self-employment increases non-metro womens
informal economy load, but decreases metro womens
16Correlation between Types of AVAILABLE Social
Capital Site-level
Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market .76 .84 .29
Bureaucratic .87 .12
Associative .13
(r) 19 sites raw sums with skewed variables
logged plt.01 Source NRE Site Profiles 2000
Return
Next
17How Do Systems Inter-relate?
Return
Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market .18 .28 .27
Bureaucratic .37 .40
Associative .29
Correlations between types of social capital used
(1995 NRE Households) p lt .01
18Available Social Capital is not always Used
Correlation (r) Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital
Used Social Capital Market Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market .12 .22 .20 -.18
Bureaucratic .08 .14 .09 .09
Associative .21 .35 .28 .07
Communal .05
Return
NRE HH Survey (N1849) plt.01 plt.05 Social
Capital Used within 30 minutes of site
19Social relations most often used in combination
Return
NRE Household survey 2001 1995 respondents
20Multiple Pathways
21Context Matters
Correlation (r) Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital
Used Social Capital Market Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market .12 .22 .20 -.18
Bureaucratic .08 .14 .09 .09
Associative .21 .35 .28 .07
Communal .05
Local ns Global .16
Stable .25 Fluctuating .11
Not Adjacent .18 Adjacent ns
Low Capacity .19 High Capacity -.13
NRE HH Survey (N1849) plt.01 plt.05 Social
Capital Used within 30 minutes of site
22Context Matters (Metro Adjacency)
Correlation (r) Correlation (r) Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital
Used Social Capital Used Social Capital Market Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market NAdj .36 .40 .43 -.31
Market Adj. -.09 -.08 -.07 -.16
Bureaucratic NAdj .19 .18 .18 ns
Bureaucratic Adj. ns ns ns .13
Associative NAdj .42 .53 .52 -.22
Associative Adj. ns .09 ns .17
Communal NAdj .11 .11 .14 ns
Communal Adj. -.18 -.08 -.22 ns
Return
NRE HH Survey (N1849) plt.01 plt.05 Social
Capital Used within 30 minutes of site
23Context Matters
HH Income by Associative Social Capital and
Global Exposure
The use of social capital increases HH incomes
but not if exposure to the global economy is low
Public expenditure on associative social capital
will have higher impact in globally exposed sites
NRE HH Survey 2001 (N1698) Adj. R2 .04
24Available Social Capital is not always Used
Correlation (r) Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital
Used Social Capital Market Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market .12
Bureaucratic .14
Associative .28
Communal .05
NRE HH Survey (N1849) plt.01 plt.05 Social
Capital Used within 30 minutes of site
25Characteristics of Social Economy Organizations
26Correlations between Social Economy
Characteristics (Site list)
Democratic Service Ethic Legal Structure Non-government
gt 20 from sales -.68 0.07 .62 .76
Democratic -0.08 .37 -.76
Service Ethic 0.03 0.04
Legal Structure 0.1
27Type of social economy organizations(full NRE
sample 295 organizations)
28Types of organizations used by HH respondents
(N1363)
Responses gt 20 from sales Democratic Service Ethic Legal Structure Non-govt
Yes 3.4 53.7 85.3 51.1 68.5
Probabily 2.9 21.7 .4 19.6 2.1
Probably Not 3.8 7.2 .1 7.9 2.7
No 74.0 .5 .2 1.8 6.6
Dont Know 15.9 16.9 13.9 19.6 20.1
29Correlations between social economy
characteristics (HH survey)
Democratic Service Ethic Legal Structure Non-govt
gt20 from sales .09 (1108) -.95 (1141) .28 (1071) .35 (1059)
Democratic .94 (1130) .96 (1084) -.59 (1045)
Service Ethic .88 (1092) -.17 (1077)
Legal Structure -.66 (1013)
30Type of social economy organizations(HH survey)
31Correlations HH charactersitics by Use of social
economy services
HH Characteristic Narrow Broad
Young adults in HH -.13
Seniors in HH .10
At least 1 person empl -.06
Volunteer in site .19 .72
Volunteer outside site .06 .33
HH income .09
Educ of respondent .07 .12
Political action .12 .26
Use community services -.09
SoCo (perceived) .08 .22
SoCo (behaviour) .14 .41
32No. of Sites with Social Economy Organizations
(20 sites)
Narrow Broad Both
At least 1 SE Organization 13 12 15
No SE Organization 7 8 5
33Correlations NRE SF dimensions and social
economy organizations
Narrow Broad
Global exposure -.06 .05
Stable economy -.13
Metro adjacency .11
Institutional capacity .07
Leading status .06
34Correlations Use of social capital and
involvement in social economy
Narrow Broad
Market .06 .13
Bureaucratic .05 .23
Associative .19 .57
Communal .05 .13
non-HH persons shared food .09
35- Policy
- Goals and priorities defining public interest
- Measures to achieve those goals
- Research
- What are the trends, drivers, and processes
conditioning those goals? - What are the most effective measures to achieve
them? - What are the likely outcomes?
36Rural Vision
- Rural is under stress
- Urban dominance will grow
- Rural-Urban interdependence remains
- Food, water, environment
- Goals Vital, safe, sustainable rural Canada
- Strategic options
- Build economic capacity
- Build Rural-Urban connectedness
- Build local governance capacity
37Challenges and Opportunities
- Remote declining population
- Mid-sized population change and limited
resources - Metro-adjacent absorption and conflicting
lifestyles - All
- Global competition
- Knowledge importance
- New rules
- Connectedness
- Networks among rural places (social capital)
- Networks within places (social cohesion)
38- Hypotheses
- All 4 forms are necessary
- Market and Bureaucratic critical in New Economy
- Rural communities strongest in Associative and
Communal
- Implications
- Build Market and Bureaucratic
- Co-ops well placed
39Many structures of networks
Bonding
Linking
40Infinite content to networks
41Available Social Capital is not always Used
Correlation (r) Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital
Used Social Capital Market Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market .12 .22 .20 -.18
Bureaucratic .08 .14 .09 .09
Associative .21 .35 .28 .07
Communal .05
NRE HH Survey (N1849) plt.01 plt.05 Social
Capital Used within 30 minutes of site
42Context Matters (Metro Adjacency)
Correlation (r) Correlation (r) Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital Available Social Capital
Used Social Capital Used Social Capital Market Bureaucratic Associative Communal
Market NAdj .36 .40 .43 -.31
Market Adj. -.09 -.08 -.07 -.16
Bureaucratic NAdj .19 .18 .18 ns
Bureaucratic Adj. ns ns ns .13
Associative NAdj .42 .53 .52 -.22
Associative Adj. ns .09 ns .17
Communal NAdj .11 .11 .14 ns
Communal Adj. -.18 -.08 -.22 ns
NRE HH Survey (N1849) plt.01 plt.05 Social
Capital Used within 30 minutes of site
43Normative Systems
High Capacity Agility with all systems
44Lessons (2)
- Available social capital is not always used
- The normative structure of social capital
conditions its relationships with the various
outcomes - High social capital use increases incomes
- High social cohesion (behaviour measured)
increases incomes
45Connections and Networks
- Structure With whom are you connected?
- Content What brings you together?
- Norms What guides your relationship?
How can policy enhance or inhibit the formation
of connections?
46Bureaucratic Norms and Connections
- Bureaucratic
- Fairness and Accountability
- Associative
- Commitment to shared interest
- Partnerships can be problematic
- Bureaucratic Accommodation
- Multiple venues for communication
- Associative-appropriate competition procedures
- Support for proposals and accountability
- Long term funding for capacity-building
47Implications for Policy and Programs
- Build and facilitate networks
- Respect and work with partners norms
- Work with and support existing networks
- Increase local and regional control and resources