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A network is a simple concept. It consists of two things: nodes
and links between those nodes. In social network analysis the nodes
of concern are people, groups and organisations. In other areas
of network analysis the nodes of concern may be pages in the World
Wide Web, difference species in an ecosystem or different compounds
in a cell. In social network analysis links may be social contacts,
exchanges of information, political influence, money, joint membership
in an organisation, joint participation in specific events or many
other aspects of human relationships. The defining feature of social
network analysis is the focus on the structure of relationships.
It
has been argued for some time that organisations are embedded in
networks of larger social processes, which they influence, and which
also influence them (Granovetter, 1985; 1992). Recognising this
can help us bridge links between different levels of analyses, relating
to different types of organisational entities within development
aid: projects, country programmes, and government policies. Within
the aid agencies themselves the structuring of relationships between
staff is another set of relationship choices with direct consequences
for how local projects and national policies relate to each other
or not. Structure can link strategies at different levels, or not
(Davies, 2003).
Further resources
- Davies, Rick (2003) Network Perspectives in the Evaluation
of Development Interventions: More Than a Metaphor available
on MandE website: www.mande.co.uk/docs/nape.pdf
- The International Network of SNA website, with a comprehensive
list of resources: /www.ire.org/sna/
- Ramalingam, Ben (2005) 'The Knowledge and Learning Toolkit'
(forthcoming RAPID toolkit) - especially for further resources
on networks and on the different connecting roles that people
can play
- Kincaid, Larry (2000) 'Social networks, ideation, and contraceptive
behaviour in Bangladesh: a longitudinal analysis', Social Science
& Medicine 50(2): 215-31 - on the use of a social network
approach to family planning communication in Bangladesh
- Perkin, Emily and Julius Court (2005) 'Networks
and Policy Processes in International Development: A Literature
Review' ODI Working Paper 252
- Castells, Manuel (2004) 'Why networks matter', published as
an afterword to the recent Demos collection of essays: McCarthy
et al. (2004) Network Logic: Who governs in an interconnected
world?
- Boonyabancha, Somsook (1999) Citizen Networks to Address
Urban Poverty Experiences of Urban Community Development Office,
Thailand UCDO, Asian Coalition for Housing Rights.
- View this as pdf
(
116kb)
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