Bookshelf

Book Review: Researchers Behaving Badly

November 4, 2012 1651

In the March 2012 issue of the Review of Radical Political Economics, Martha A. Starr of American University reviewed “Theories of Social Capital: Researchers Behaving Badly,” which examines the concept of “those features of social organization, such as networks, norms, and trust, that facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit”:

Ben Fine’s new book on social capital continues and elaborates upon key themes laid down in his 2001 book on the subject. The gist of his argument is that the concept of social capital, which has swept through the social sciences like a wildfire in the past 15 years, is so fundamentally flawed as to illuminate next to nothing about social reality; and that on the contrary, it leads us off the pathways we ought to be on to develop valuable, meaningful, and accurate conceptualizations of social life.

Click here to read the review and here to receive e-alerts from the Review of Radical Political Economics.

Business and Management INK puts the spotlight on research published in our more than 100 management and business journals. We feature an inside view of the research that’s being published in top-tier SAGE journals by the authors themselves.

View all posts by Business & Management INK

Related Articles

Women Will Inherit Trillions in the ‘Great Wealth Transfer’ – What Will They Go With It? 
Insights
December 2, 2025

Women Will Inherit Trillions in the ‘Great Wealth Transfer’ – What Will They Go With It? 

Read Now
A Box Unlocked, Not A Box Ticked: Tom Chatfield on AI and Pedagogy
Teaching
December 1, 2025

A Box Unlocked, Not A Box Ticked: Tom Chatfield on AI and Pedagogy

Read Now
Is the Dissertation Still Considered a Rite of Passage?
Infrastructure
November 17, 2025

Is the Dissertation Still Considered a Rite of Passage?

Read Now
New Guide Recognizes the Value of Good Curation
Bookshelf
October 29, 2025

New Guide Recognizes the Value of Good Curation

Read Now
The World of Criminal Psychologists Expands to Include Crimes Against Planet Earth

The World of Criminal Psychologists Expands to Include Crimes Against Planet Earth

After years of trying to understand the minds of people who hurt others, I have recently turned my attention as a criminal […]

Read Now
The Tradwife to Far-Right Pipeline 

The Tradwife to Far-Right Pipeline 

In the September edition of The Evidence, Josephine Lethbridge explores the rise of the “tradwife” lifestyle – and why it demands serious […]

Read Now
Ziyad Marar on Noticing

Ziyad Marar on Noticing

The new book Noticing: How We Attend to the World and Each Other opens with a quote from psychologist William James: “Only […]

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments