Front cover image for Better a hundred friends than a hundred rubles? : social networks in transition--the Kyrgyz Republic

Better a hundred friends than a hundred rubles? : social networks in transition--the Kyrgyz Republic

The purpose of this study, carried out in the Kyrgyz Republic in 1999, was to investigate the impact of socioeconomic change on the characteristics and functions of the social networks of poor and non-poor households in rural and urban communities. A better understanding of the role of informal networks in Kyrgyz society, it was thought, would help development specialists devise more effective ways to reach out to the poor and socially excluded, while ensuring that the benefits of development were not simply captured by those with more effective and far-reaching connections. The .findings reveal the dynamics of how the poor both disengage from and are isolated by and from the non-poor. They further describe how the social networks of poor and non-poor households have polarized and separated in a process that parallels the sharp socioeconomic stratification that has taken place since national independence in 1991. The study examines not only how the networks have separated, but also how each has changed in character
Print Book, English, 2004
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2004
vii, 71 pages : illustrations, color map ; 26 cm.
9780821358986, 9780821358993, 0821358987, 0821358995
55955677
Executive summary
Better a hundred friends than a hundred rubles?
Social networks during the Soviet Period
Social networks in transition
Conclusions and policy implications
ANNEXES: Background on the Kyrgyz Republic
Examples of research matrices
Case studies
interview summaries
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