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Articles

Remittances, Bonds and Bridges: Remittances and Social Capital in Burundi

Pages 1294-1308
Received 07 Nov 2013
Accepted 20 Feb 2015
Published online: 14 Jul 2015

Abstract

This study explores the effects of remittances on households’ structural social capital in urban Burundi. Distinctions are made between bonding and bridging social capital, referring to intra- versus inter-network ties of family members and friends. The results demonstrate that remittance-receiving households invest more in bridging social capital by participating in organisations (donating time), but make fewer monetary contributions, compared to non-receiving households. Remittances have mixed effects on bonding social capital: receiving households give significantly less gifts to family members and friends, but are more likely to send internal remittances, compared to non-receivers. The implications of these findings for post-conflict development are discussed.

Acknowledgements

This study was part of the Migration and Development: A World in Motion research project funded by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs and conducted by the Maastricht Graduate School of Governance, Maastricht University. Special thanks are due to Valentina Mazzucato, Khalid Koser, Carlos Vargas-Silva and two anonymous reviewers for providing valuable feedback on earlier drafts of this paper. The data that was used for this paper will become publicly available on the Migration and Development Research Group (UNU-MERIT) website (http://migration.merit.unu.edu/) in 2015. Until then, the data are available upon request.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

 

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