Social capital and civil war: The Dinka communities in Sudan?s civil war

Social capital and civil war: The Dinka communities in Sudan?s civil war

Author: 
Deng, Luka Biong
Place: 
New York
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date published: 
2010
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
African Affairs
Source: 
African Affairs, Vol. 109 Issue 435, April 2010, pp.231-250
ISSN: 
0001-9909
Abstract: 

It is generally assumed that violent conflict has a negative effect on social capital, and war zones are considered to be ?zones of social capital deficiency?. This article challenges this position, and attempts to develop a more nuanced understanding of the status of social capital in the context of Sudan?s civil war. The empirical findings clearly question any simplistic assumption that conflict erodes social capital. While it is true that certain types of social capital have been a casualty of civil war, the opposite is the case in other communities. The article explains this difference by drawing a distinction between ?endogenous? and ?exogenous? counter-insurgency warfare. Communities in southern Sudan that were exposed to endogenous counter-insurgency warfare experienced a loss of social capital, but where exogenous violence dominated, there has been a deepening and strengthening of bonding social capital among and within communities.

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CITATION: Deng, Luka Biong. Social capital and civil war: The Dinka communities in Sudan?s civil war . New York : Oxford University Press (OUP) , 2010. African Affairs, Vol. 109 Issue 435, April 2010, pp.231-250 - Available at: https://library.au.int/social-capital-and-civil-war-dinka-communities-sudans-civil-war-4