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Volume 31, Issue 6: December, 2004
Abstract
Assessing Interorganizational Networks as a Dimension
of Community Capacity: Illustrations From a Community Intervention
to Prevent Lead Poisoning
Helen Harber Singer, MPH, Michelle Crozier Kegler, DrPH,
MPH
Network analysis is often cited as a method for assessing
collaboration among organizations as an indicator of community
capacity. The purpose of this study was to (1) document patterns
of collaboration in organizational networks related to lead
poisoning prevention in a Native American community and (2)
examine measurement issues in using organizational network
analysis to assess community capacity. Interviews were conducted
with representatives from 22 tribes, government agencies,
schools, and community-based organizations in northeastern
Oklahoma. Intensity, density, and reliability were assessed
for several stages of collaboration. Intensity and density
were greater for similar types of organizations than for the
network as a whole and decreased as stage of collaboration
increased. Network data were more reliable when responses
were dichotomized than when intensities were compared. Mean
reliability scores across two respondents from the same organization
ranged from 60% to 90%. Results from network studies may help
communities learn how to strengthen organizational networks
to enhance community capacity.
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