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Discussions in Group 3 Power, politics, the State and Social Capital.

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1 Discussions in Group 3 Power, politics, the State and Social Capital

2 Some general assumptions  Individuals or communities with weak bonding SC are more vulnerable to HIV spread and its negative impacts  Understanding SC can help us to prioritise responses  Bonding – defining ‘protective’ forms of bonding; types of groups  When groups do not have resources then bonding SC is all they have, it becomes a crucial asset

3 Social capital and the state  Bonding, Bridging, Linking social capital are useful to understand patterns of social resilience. Programmes can fail if they are not sensitive to this  How can the state through policies and programmes, address the needs of the poor in a manner that strengthens SC

4 Beyond bonding  SC is not a substitute for Social justice  Bonding is necessary but not sufficient. It is not sufficient for the state to ‘leave the poor to their own devices’  How can the state foster / facilitate and respond to various forms of social capital  Linking social capital is the ‘missing link’ crucial to reach across power structures.  But who is the agent in linking SC? More than one focus of agency is involved (State, oppressed groups)

5  Possibilities of non-confrontational linking SC  Uganda – strong but inclusive state  S Africa – TAC had confrontational linking with elements of the state  Thailand - Different key populations may have different levels of bonding and hence different responses to the same situation  Stigma needs to factored into understanding bonding and linking National examples

6 Relation between various types of SC  SC helps us to grapple with the vague ‘structural’ basket; useful meso level concept  Strong bonding, then bridging may be a resource to mobilise linking  Bonding, Bridging and Linking operate at different levels. There can be a spiral of bonding (local soldarity, resistance) leading to bridging between groups with internal coherence (coalitions, alliances). becomes the basis for linking with larger power structures

7 Bridging Bonding State Bridging Linking Bonding

8 Linking Social capital  Need to expand the concept of links  LSC may be consensual or conflictual  ‘Power’ includes non-state actors (media, donors, academics); latter may be allies to subaltern groups. Even confrontational groups may have alliances with these  The state itself is a complex entity with different arms  National and sub-national states (S Africa, India) have their own specificities

9 State, patterns of funding and SC  How to create systems that foster and facilitate Linking social capital  Even for bio-medical interventions, state requires linking social capital. State needs social networks and mobilisation to roll out complex interventions  Global Fund CCM – mandates broad consultative processes within countries  Contrast with PEPFAR with a very vertical approach, no emphasis on process

10 Funders and the State  Talking of power we need to consider the power of funders  Relationship between national leaders and funding agencies may influence funding patterns (Kenya, Uganda)  Different Indonesian state leaderships have negotiated issues differently with the national Govt.

11 “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together”.


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