Measuring Social Cohesion: An Experiment using the Canadian National Survey of Giving,Volunteering, and Participating |
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Authors: | Fernando Rajulton Zenaida R Ravanera Roderic Beaujot |
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Institution: | (1) University of Western Ontario, Sociology, Social Science Centre, N6A 5c2 London, Ontario, Canada |
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Abstract: | Social cohesion is a concept difficult to define and to measure. As there can be many definitions, so there can be many measurements.
The main problem, either in defining or measuring the concept, is its multilevel and multidimensional nature. At one extreme,
country is the most commonly used level to view social cohesion but measurement at this level is of little use for any interventions.
At the other extreme, community is the most useful level but it is a social construct for which data are difficult to get, given the administrative boundaries
used in social surveys. As an initial attempt to measure social cohesion at a subcountry level, this study focuses on census metropolitan areas for which data on several dimensions of social cohesion are available. We use the information gathered by the National Survey
on Giving, Volunteering and Participating (NSGVP) on three dimensions of social cohesion: political (voting and volunteering),
economic (occupation, income, labour force participation) and social (social interactions, informal volunteering). Using statistical
techniques including factor analysis and standardization, we create an overall index of social cohesion for each CMA. We point
out use of this measure for further analysis of social dynamics. |
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Keywords: | latent scores national survey of giving social cohesion structural equation modeling volunteering and participating |
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