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Social isolation: A conceptual and measurement proposal

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posted on 2024-09-06, 07:02 authored by Diego Zavaleta, Kim Samuel, China Mills
Social isolation is a deprivation of social connectedness. It is a crucial aspect that continues to be named by people as a core impediment for achieving well-being and as a relevant factor for understanding poverty. The notion of social isolation has been discussed within a diversity of theories that have provided rich insights into particular aspects of social isolation. However, there is no agreement on the core components of this social malady or on how to measure it. Although the challenge of conceptualising and measuring social connectedness is daunting, this paper argues that existing research in several fields provides solid ground for a common concept and for the construction of basic internationally comparable indicators that measure specific aspects of social isolation. In particular, this paper aims to contribute to the debate on social connectedness and its measurement in three ways: (1) presenting a working definition that, while doing justice to the rich insights advanced by different theories, stresses relational features in the life experience of people; (2) emphasising the relevance of isolation for poverty analysis; and (3) proposing some indicators to measure social connectedness that could be feasibly incorporated into a multi-topic household survey.

History

Citation

Zavaleta, D., Samuel, K., and Mills, C. (2014) Social Isolation: A Conceptual and Measurement Proposal, OPHI Working Papers 67. Oxford: University of Oxford.

Series

OPHI Working Papers 67

IDS Item Types

Series paper (non-IDS)

Copyright holder

Oxford Poverty & Human Development Initiative

Language

en

Identifier Ag

RES-167-25-0617, ES/I032827/1

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