Corvinus University of Budapest, Institute of Sociology and Social Policy
Abstract
Path dependency is created and maintained by three intertwined
influences of network capital; that is, the inertia of the networks, the culture which
defines the proper use of network capital, and the way such network capital fits
into the local and global institutional setting. Following a brief introduction of the
terms network capital and path dependency, I develop an extremely simplified
dual typology to differentiate between network-sensitive and network-insensitive
societies. These two extremes of a continuum characterize societies in which
either everyday life is under the total domination of network capital or where
networks are auxiliary resources to be used in rare and special situations. I will
show how both communism and post-communism have been a fertile institutional
setting for the emergence of network-sensitivity and how network capital under
such conditions become so powerful that it shapes other institutions to its needs.
In the last section I shall argue that the mechanisms I described in a networksensitive
institutional setting are present in a network-insensitive one as well, and
that there are signs that globalization increases the level of network-sensitivity all
over the world