共享经济与社会资本:时间银行中虚构的社会性期望

IF 0.6 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Майя Андреевна Шмидт
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章着眼于时间银行——一种人们用时间而不是金钱作为货币相互交换服务的交换系统。从社会工作的角度来看,时间银行是一种有助于减轻贫困和增加包容性的社会创新。然而,大多数这类组织未能将其作为护理提供者制度化,并在头三年内失败。在本文中,我讨论了一个罕见的成功案例——位于俄罗斯第四大城市下诺夫哥罗德的一家时间银行,它已经运作了15年多,并将自己定位为一个非慈善组织。为了解释下诺夫哥罗德时间银行的成功,我参与了共享经济研究——这是一个不断发展但却模棱两可的领域。关于共享经济的研究主要集中在两个极端的案例上:企业对客户的运营,或者草根社区实践市场交换的激进替代方案。这些案例研究都基于一个假设,即共享经济组织将产生社会资本。然而,支持这一说法的证据有限。在本文中,我旨在检验这一假设,并探讨下诺夫哥罗德时间银行成员之间培养的非正式网络、互惠规范和信任是否是解释这种联系可持续性的因素。这项研究是通过对该社区的看门人和成员进行22次深入访谈得出的。在访谈中,我关注参与者的社会人口学特征及其社会资本结构;社区中实行的交换模式的特点(服务的数量、方向和范围,与专业活动和其他生活领域的关系);他们的价值观和世界观(平等主义、利他主义、正义主义);以及普遍信任的指标。结果显示,时间银行家往往不会在交易所框架之外建立牢固和可持续的关系。我提出了以下解释性假设:时间银行家的计算性,“平等主义”服务交换的市场驱动估值以及对交换的单边态度与对gemeinschaft的渴望相冲突,gemeinschaft是一种基于互惠规范的强烈相互依赖的社区。这种联系未能为普遍信任的出现提供条件。试图同时创建一个紧密联系的社区,但仍然满足数字时代的需求,导致了共享经济平台的仿冒。除了手头的案例,本研究通过总结产生社会资本的期望的理由,并解释了为什么某些期望无法满足,将共享经济的修辞和现实理论化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Sharing Economy and Social Capital: The Fictional Expectations of Sociality in a Time Bank
This article looks at time banking ­– a system of exchange in which people trade services with one another using time instead of money as currency. Time banking is framed from a social work perspective as a social innovation that contributes to poverty alleviation and increasing inclusion. However, most such organizations fail to institutionalize as care providers and fail within the first three years. In this paper, I discuss a rare success story—a time bank in Nizhny Novgorod, the fourth largest city in Russia—which has been functioning for over 15 years and positioned itself as a non-charitable organization. I engage with sharing economy studies—a growing but ambiguous field—to explain the success of the time bank in Nizhny Novgorod. Research in the sharing economy has mostly concentrated on two extreme cases: business-to-customer operations or grassroots communities practicing radical alternatives to market exchange. The case studies have been united by an assumption that sharing economy organizations would generate social capital. However, there has been limited evidence to support this claim. In this article, I aim to test this hypothesis and explore whether the informal networks, norms of reciprocity and trust that are fostered among members of the Nizhny Novgorod time bank are the factors that explain the sustainability of this association. The study is informed by 22 in-depth interviews with the gatekeepers and members of this community. In the interviews, I paid attention to the socio-demographic characteristics of the participants and the structure of their social capital; the characteristics of the mode of exchange practiced in the community (the volume, direction, and range of services, the relatedness to professional activities and other spheres of life); their value set and worldview (egalitarianism, altruism, justice); and indicators of generalized trust. Results revealed that time bankers do not tend to create strong and sustainable relationships outside of the framework of the exchange. I put forward the following explanatory hypothesis: the calculativeness of time bankers, the market-driven valuations of ‘egalitarian’ service exchange and a unilateral attitude to the exchange are in conflict with a longing for Gemeinschaft—a community with strong bonding interdependence based on the norms of mutuality. This association failed to provide the conditions for generalized trust to emerge. The attempt to simultaneously create a tightly bonded community, but still answer the needs of the digital age resulted in a pastiche of a sharing economy platform. Beyond the case at hand, this study theorizes the rhetoric and reality of the sharing economy by summarizing the grounds for the expectations of generating social capital and explains why certain expectations could not be met.
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CiteScore
1.30
自引率
20.00%
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