Jane Franklin
London South Bank University
6 Papers
18 Citations
Jane Franklin is an academic researcher from London South Bank University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social capital & Social reproduction. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
•Book
Assessing Social Capital: Concept, Policy and Practice
Rosalind Edwards,Jane Franklin,Janet Holland +2 more
- 01 Nov 2006
TL;DR: Social capital is a key concept in academic research and policymaking internationally It focuses attention on social relationships, values, and access to resources in families, communities, regions and nations But does the concept, with its focus on particular aspects of social life and the thrust of its influence on policy initiatives, hide more than it illuminates? Is it even harmful? Can social capital ideas be amended or adapted to bring other issues into view, or are there alternative concepts that are better able to address contemporary social, economic and political life?.
71
(Re)claiming the social: A conversation between feminist, late modern and social capital theories
Jane Franklin,Rachel Thomson +1 more
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: Adkins and Misztal as mentioned in this paper discuss the problematic nature of social capital theories for feminist theory and politics, and explore how realignments in the relationships between theoretical and empirical concerns have the potential to reinvigorate the relationship between feminist theories and politics.
15
Social Capital: Policy and Politics
TL;DR: In this paper, Baron, J.R. Field and T.S. Schuller discuss the origins and perspectives of social capital in modern sociology, and present a survey of the social capital literature.
10
SPECIAL FEATURE: (Re)claiming the social: A conversation between feminist, late modern and social capital theories
Jane Franklin,Rachel Thomson +1 more
TL;DR: Adkins and Misztal as discussed by the authors discuss the problematic nature of social capital theories for feminist theory and politics, and explore how realignments in the relationships between theoretical and empirical concerns have the potential to reinvigorate the relationship between feminist theories and politics.