2014
DOI: 10.1080/14631377.2014.964465
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Social capital in Russian agricultural production co-operatives

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Cited by 8 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
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“…Thus, cooperatives will prefer to use social capital for their activities and less financial capital, while the opposite is the case for investor-owned firms. Production cooperatives often rely on labour-intensive production rather than capital-intensive production because they have a large amount of social capital and a shortage of financial capital [32]. Members are willing to invest their own labour in the cooperative and may enjoy working together.…”
Section: Conversions Between Forms Of Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, cooperatives will prefer to use social capital for their activities and less financial capital, while the opposite is the case for investor-owned firms. Production cooperatives often rely on labour-intensive production rather than capital-intensive production because they have a large amount of social capital and a shortage of financial capital [32]. Members are willing to invest their own labour in the cooperative and may enjoy working together.…”
Section: Conversions Between Forms Of Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Drawing on evidence from Kurgan oblast, Golovina and her colleagues found that cooperatives do not really behave like cooperatives at all. Instead of empowering producers, cooperatives behave as continuations of Soviet era farms that “take responsibility not only for the labour force but also for all inhabitants of a village,” which means that cooperatives have “responsibility for all social life in the village” (Golovina, Hess, Nilsson, & Wolz, , p. 533). In Belgorod oblast, cooperatives do not generate bargaining power on behalf of their members but instead act more as a broker.…”
Section: Collective Action As a Remedy?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is not to say that the leaders necessarily try to enrich themselves. They may also use their power position in the interests of the membership (Golovina et al, 2014). Hence there is room for some speculation.…”
Section: Members' Control Of Managersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…"… Russian rural territory tends to demonstrate strong communality, little spread of entrepreneurial activity and a preference for working in vertically integrated enterprises…" (Efendiev and Sorokin, 2013, p. 111). The decisionmaking structure is likely to have been inherited from the Soviet farms (Golovina et al, 2014).…”
Section: [A] Factor That Must Not Be Ignored Is the Traditional Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
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