Â鶹ƵµÀ

Dr Thilo Boeck

Job: Senior Research Fellow

Faculty: Health and Life Sciences

School/department: School of Applied Social Sciences

Address: Â鶹ƵµÀ, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH.

T: +44 (0)116 2577879

E: tgboeck@dmu.ac.uk

Social Media:

 

Personal profile

Thilo Boeck started his career as a practitioner in Youth and Community Development work in Lima / Peru. Using a sustainable development approach he initiated and managed a development project in Lima enabling people to use their skills and existing networks to set up community-led projects attracting investment into the community. In the UK he has worked on several research projects exploring the impact of social policy on social exclusion / inclusion and social capital within national and international contexts.

Thilo has been the principal investigator on a participative research project funded by the Big Lottery Fund exploring the impact of youth volunteering on social capital. He has also been the academic lead in an innovative partnership project between the voluntary, statutory and academic sector (Leicestershire County Council, Leicester City Council, CVS Community Partnership, Voluntary Action Leicester and the Centre for Social Action at Â鶹ƵµÀ) around social capital and community cohesion involving local people in the whole research process.

At the moment Thilo is working on two projects; Amplified Resilient Communities (ARC) and The Survey of Leicester

The Amplified Resilient Communities (ARC) project is funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. The project is a partnership between the Centre for Social Action and the IOCT (Institute of Creative Technologies). The ARC project taps into the existing social capital (networks and resources) in several neighbourhoods in Leicester and is facilitating people and groups to enhance their resilience. The project team is developing digital media skills and encouraging participants to access existing national and international community networks.

The Survey of Leicester is commissioned by the City Mayor of Leicester and Thilo is working with the City Council and the University of Leicester in developing a survey of Leicester, which reflects the City Council’s wider approach to economic renewal and social development. The Centre for Social Action is supporting a more participatory approach where research professionals work alongside members of a community to define issues, make sense of data, and appraise and act on the results. The project will be trialling and modifying the technical approaches to gathering and representing data through community engagement, making sure that the process is accessible to local residents. The views of residents will be gathered to inform a new way of surveying the city by focusing on resiliency and using social and digital media.

Publications and outputs

 


  • dc.title: Involving Children and Young People in Health and Social Care Research dc.contributor.author: Fleming, Jennie; Boeck, T. G.

  • dc.title: Volunteering and faith communities in England. dc.contributor.author: Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie; Smith, Roger; Thorp, Leila

  • dc.title: Social capital and young people. dc.contributor.author: Boeck, T. G.

  • dc.title: Amplified Leicester: Impact on social capital and cohesion. dc.contributor.author: Thomas, Sue; Boeck, T. G.

  • dc.title: Young people and social capital: an exploration. dc.contributor.author: Boeck, T. G. dc.description.abstract: Drawing on a critical realist approach and especially Derek Layder’s ‘Domain Theory’ (Layder 1997; 2006) this thesis explores the richness and complexity of young people’s social capital. The study used a mixed methods design which incorporated sequential and concurrent data collection and analysis comprising 16 in-depth interviews, 17 discussion groups and a survey questionnaire (n=500). Twenty one organisations participated in this study, accessed through youth groups, the youth justice system, one school and one college from the Midlands area, in the 13-19 age range. The total sample using all research methods was 574 young people. Young people’s maintenance and enhancement of social capital is seen as a process which has to be negotiated in a continuous interaction between self, situated activity, social settings and contexts. Within this, critical creative agency, a positive outlook on life and being able to make the leap of trust become agentic mediating factors which help young people to navigate life situations and take the necessary risks to develop a more dynamic social capital. The study challenges some common discourses on diversity, especially those referring to bonding and bridging social capital (Putnam 2000). Contexts of privilege but also of gender and ethnicity are important mechanisms that have a strong impact on the access to social capital resources and points towards the resiliency young people are able to build. Policy and practice need to build on the situated activity of young people and not erode it. Enhancing young people’s existing social capital is achieved by building on their existing resourcefulness, strengthening their existing support networks, opening up new horizons and creating access to new resources within a strength perspective. Institutions need to enhance resiliency and positive risk taking, nurture trusting relationships with significant others and enhance young people’s outlook on life.

  • dc.title: Risk, youth and moving on. dc.contributor.author: Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-; Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie

  • dc.title: The role of social capital and resources in resilience to risk. dc.contributor.author: Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie

  • dc.title: Pathways into and out of crime for young people dc.contributor.author: Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie; Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-

  • dc.title: Social capital, resilience and desistance: The ability to be a risk navigator dc.contributor.author: Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie; Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-

  • dc.title: Young people, pathways and crime: beyond risk factors dc.contributor.author: Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-; Dunkerton, Leigh; Marsland, Louise; Boeck, T. G. dc.description: This is a jointly authored piece representing 3 of the projects in the ESRC network: ‘Pathways into and out of Crime for Young People: Risk, Resilience and Diversity’. It is a major output of the network and was peer reviewed for a special edition of the journal (a leading international criminology journal). The article is ground breaking in its critique of risk factors, and proposes a multi-paradigm approach to risk factor research and policy-making. It is early to assess impact, but the journal has an international audience and is a lead journal for research development and policy critique.

.

Research interests/expertise

  • Social Capital
  • Resilience
  • Social cohesion
  • Mixed methods research
  • Critical realism
  • Participation
  • Community development
  • Youth work
  • Social media
  • Amplification

Areas of teaching

  • Research methods
  • Mixed Methods research
  • Social policy (especially around community cohesion and social capital)

Qualifications

  • MA Community Education, Â鶹ƵµÀ, Leicester
  • PhD on ‘Young People and Social Capital’ (2011)

Membership of professional associations and societies

International Sociological Association

Conference attendance

Amplified Leicester: a city-wide social media experiment, Media Education Summit 2010 held at Birmingham City University (September 2010) with Sue Thomas

The Amplified Resilient Community, Vision 2020 Leicester (October 2010) ‘Volunteering and Faith Communities in England’, NCVO conference, Researching the Voluntary Sector, Warwick University (September 2009) with Jennie Fleming

Young People’s participation in project Re:action - a youth led research project. NCVO conference, Researching the Voluntary Sector, Warwick University (September 2009)

Enhancing dynamic and bridging social ties through participative youth volunteering. NCVO conference, Researching the Voluntary Sector, Warwick University (September 2008)

Key articles information

Boeck T and Thomas S (2010) Amplified Leicester: Impact on social capital and cohesion

Boeck T et al (2010)

Boeck T, Fleming J, Smith R and Thorp L (2009) Volunteering and Faith Communities in England
http://www.i-volunteer.org.uk/assets/igroup/modernising-volunteering/files/faith-and-volunteering-year-1-report.pdf
 
Boeck T (2009) The Impact of Volunteering on Social Capital and Community Cohesion

Current research students

Susan Atherton: Communities, Justice and Cohesion: An examination of the impact of community justice initiatives in Middlesbrough

Ahlem Lezerard: Youth Crime: youth’s future in the adversity of inherited past and present challenges. A comparative study of Britain and France.

Externally funded research grants information

Survey of Leicester (2012- )
Partnership between CSA, the City Council and the University of Leicester to develop a survey of Leicester. The project is trialling and modifying the technical approaches to gathering and representing data through community engagement, making sure that the process is accessible to local residents. (£23K)

Amplified Resilient Communities (2011- )
PI on a Joseph Rowntree Foundation funded project exploring the use of social media in order to connect communities, enhance social capital and build community resiliency. (£60K)

Equality and Resiliency Tool for LSEF (2011)
Commissioned by The Leicester/shire Equalities Forum (LSEF) to develop a Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland sub-regional needs analysis around their equality and diversity strategy. (£15K)

Amplified Leicester (2009-2010)
Co- investigator with Prof Sue Thomas on a city-wide experiment funded by NESTA, designed to grow the innovation capacity of Leicester across the city's disparate and diverse communities.

Leicestershire County Council (2006 – 2010)
PI in a longitudinal social capital project as the baseline for the Stronger Communities element of Local Area Agreements in partnership with the Chief Executive of North West Leicestershire Council for Voluntary Service, Leicestershire County Council and the County Local Strategic Partnership.

Volunteering England (2008-2009)
Joint PI with Jennie Fleming commissioned by Volunteering England to gain a better understanding of faith-based volunteering, the needs of faith-based organisations and how these needs could be understood and met by volunteering infrastructure organisations and also to consider the role faith volunteering plays in enhancing community cohesion. (£48,500)

Big Lottery Funded Project (2006-2009)
PI on a research partnership between Youth Action Network and Centre for Social Action ’How does youth participation in volunteering benefit young people and their communities?’ (£300K)

Internally funded research project information

PI on DMU funded RIF project: Making Connections: Young people, resilience and the power of networks

Professional esteem indicators

  • Peer Review of Articles:
    British Journal of Socioogy
    Journal of Mixed Methods Research
Thilo Boek