2002
DOI: 10.1177/00208728020450040601
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Social capital, economic development and food security in Peru's mountain region

Abstract: The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) is a nongovernmental organization that provides community development and disaster relief services in 120 countries around the world. ADRA is an agency of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, a Christian North American-based religious denomination that operates an international system of hospitals, clinics, schools, universities and human service programs (). Consistent with its non-pro®t status, ADRA employs and offers services to peop… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, participating in ethnic events may allow people to relate to each other and to develop a common bond that is essential for the development of social networks (20). A study carried out in Peru’s mountain region showed that having a higher social capital was associated with higher food security and a higher income level (26). Another study conducted in Hartford also showed a positive association between social networks and food security (21), however it did not focus on the relationship between acculturation, social networks, food stamps management, and food security among Latinos.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, participating in ethnic events may allow people to relate to each other and to develop a common bond that is essential for the development of social networks (20). A study carried out in Peru’s mountain region showed that having a higher social capital was associated with higher food security and a higher income level (26). Another study conducted in Hartford also showed a positive association between social networks and food security (21), however it did not focus on the relationship between acculturation, social networks, food stamps management, and food security among Latinos.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…young adult success among at-risk youth, high school dropout rates, emotional adjustment of youth in high-risk neighbourhoods, and developmental and behavioural outcomes in high-risk preschool children, among others) (Boisjoly, Duncan & Hofferth, 1995;Furstenberg & Hughes, 1995;Garbarino & Sherman, 1980;Johnson, 1999;Maccoby, Johnson & Church, 1958;Morrow, 2000;Putnam, 2000;Runyan et al, 1998;Sampson, Morenoff & Earls, 1999;Stevenson, 1998;Swanson Ernst, 2001;Teachman et al, 1996Teachman et al, , 1997. The remaining eight studies explored the effects of community social capital on adults' wellbeing, as well as on the general wellbeing of the community (Brehm & Rahn, 1997;Butler & Flora, 2000;Díaz, Drumm, Ramírez, & Oidjarv, 2000;Falk & Kilpatrick, 2000;Krishna & Uphoff, 1999;Onyx & Bullen, 2000;Pantoja, 1999;Portney & Berry, 1997).…”
Section: Indicators Of Community Social Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Food security was found to be correlated with network-related variables in diverse studies, e.g., with levels of social interactions with neighbors, friends, and family members in Peru (Díaz et al 2002); with the number of close friends of the head of the household in Burkina Faso (Becquey et al 2012); with attendance of social events and church used as proxy measures of social networks in a Puerto Rican community (Dhokarh et al 2011); and with the perception that an individual's neighborhood was helpful and trustworthy in a U.S. study (Walker et al 2007). In studies on coping mechanisms to address food insecurity, reliance on social support provided by extended family members, friends, or neighbors has been identified in several geographic and social contexts, including AIDS-afflicted households in rural Malawi (Mtika 2001); an Inuit coastal community in the Canadian High Arctic (Beaumier and Ford 2010); and lowincome households from North Carolina, USA (Ahluwalia et al 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%