Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas

Master of Science === Department of Landscape Architecture/Regional & Community Planning === Stephanie Rolley === This is an exploratory study investigating: How those currently experiencing homelessness perceive the influence of bonding and bridging social capital on their future successful res...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Limon, Lester Lloyd II
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18806
id ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-18806
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-188062016-03-01T03:52:21Z Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas Limon, Lester Lloyd II Homelessness Kansas Social capital Social Research (0344) Master of Science Department of Landscape Architecture/Regional & Community Planning Stephanie Rolley This is an exploratory study investigating: How those currently experiencing homelessness perceive the influence of bonding and bridging social capital on their future successful residential reintegration. It is an important consideration in understanding the emotional and intellectual circumstances of residents entering a rural shelter environment, and discovering what types of social capital residents need and have access to. This research used phenomonography to gain access to the thoughts and opinions of residents of the Harvey County Homeless Shelter, coupled with grounded theory to discover emergent themes in those transcripts. The study topic was explored through direct inquiry of people experiencing homelessness in Newton, Kansas. Through an interview process, five areas of inquiry were studied: demographics, residential history, social connections, community connections, and social connectedness and community belonging. Using grounded theory methodology, the responses were coded and the writing of rich memos determined and explored themes. Emergent themes; an analysis of their relevancy to the study topic; an examination of the areas the study topic satisfied; and, identification of areas where it failed to satisfy are topics of exploration concerning the findings. Community courtesy, individual personality, healthy relationships, and social connections over address were the four emergent themes to come from the five categories of inquiry. In general, resident’s perceptions of social capital were important to their future efforts toward residential reintegration, although in slightly different ways than the study topic assumed. 2014-12-19T21:26:20Z 2014-12-19T21:26:20Z 2014-12-19 2015 December Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18806 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Homelessness
Kansas
Social capital
Social Research (0344)
spellingShingle Homelessness
Kansas
Social capital
Social Research (0344)
Limon, Lester Lloyd II
Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas
description Master of Science === Department of Landscape Architecture/Regional & Community Planning === Stephanie Rolley === This is an exploratory study investigating: How those currently experiencing homelessness perceive the influence of bonding and bridging social capital on their future successful residential reintegration. It is an important consideration in understanding the emotional and intellectual circumstances of residents entering a rural shelter environment, and discovering what types of social capital residents need and have access to. This research used phenomonography to gain access to the thoughts and opinions of residents of the Harvey County Homeless Shelter, coupled with grounded theory to discover emergent themes in those transcripts. The study topic was explored through direct inquiry of people experiencing homelessness in Newton, Kansas. Through an interview process, five areas of inquiry were studied: demographics, residential history, social connections, community connections, and social connectedness and community belonging. Using grounded theory methodology, the responses were coded and the writing of rich memos determined and explored themes. Emergent themes; an analysis of their relevancy to the study topic; an examination of the areas the study topic satisfied; and, identification of areas where it failed to satisfy are topics of exploration concerning the findings. Community courtesy, individual personality, healthy relationships, and social connections over address were the four emergent themes to come from the five categories of inquiry. In general, resident’s perceptions of social capital were important to their future efforts toward residential reintegration, although in slightly different ways than the study topic assumed.
author Limon, Lester Lloyd II
author_facet Limon, Lester Lloyd II
author_sort Limon, Lester Lloyd II
title Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas
title_short Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas
title_full Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas
title_fullStr Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, Kansas
title_sort understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in newton, kansas
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18806
work_keys_str_mv AT limonlesterlloydii understandingtheperceivedinfluenceofsocialcapitalbyhomelesspersonsinnewtonkansas
_version_ 1718196942967668736