Tags / social capital

Tagged with “social capital” (3) activity chart

  1. Social Capital in Post-Disaster Recovery

    17.01.2013

    Daniel Aldrich, Professor, Purdue University

    This lecture puts the Great East Japan Earthquake into perspective by analysing it in the context of other major disasters. Using micro- and neighborhood-level data from four disasters in three nations over the 20th and 21st centuries, this talk will investigate standard theories of recovery and resilience. Bivariate, time series cross sectional, and matching analyses show that more than factors such as individual or personal wealth, aid from the government, or damage from the disaster, the depth of social capital best predicts recovery. Social capital works through three main mechanisms: elevating voice and suppressing exit, overcoming collective action barriers, and providing informal insurance. Should social networks prove the critical engines before, during, and after disaster, this suggests a new approach to disaster mitigation for NGOs, individuals, and governments.

    Daniel P. Aldrich is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Purdue University on leave for the academic year 2012 ΜΆ 2013 as a Fulbright research professor at Tokyo University. He received his Ph.D. and M.A. in political science from Harvard University, an M.A. from the University of California at Berkeley, and his B.A. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has published two books (Site fights and Building Resilience) and more than 80 peer reviewed articles, book chapters, reviews, and OpEds in locations such as the New York Times, CNN, and the Asahi Shinbun.

    http://i.dijtokyo.org/events/social_capital_in_post-disaster_recovery

    —Huffduffed by Zatoichi one month ago

  2. Making Whuffie: Raising Social Capital in Online Communities

    This talk gets to the heart of how people interact and exchange information in online communities: through social capital, or as Cory Doctorow calls it, Whuffie. The key to growing customers in online communities is through growing your social capital. You will learn the 5 lessons of raising Whuffie through online communities in this presentation.

    Tara Hunt Intuit

    —Huffduffed by eby 3 years ago

  3. Making Whuffie: Raising Social Capital in Online Communities

    This talk gets to the heart of how people interact and exchange information in online communities: through social capital, or as Cory Doctorow calls it, Whuffie. The key to growing customers in online communities is through growing your social capital. You will learn the 5 lessons of raising Whuffie through online communities in this presentation.

    Tara Hunt Intuit

    —Huffduffed by tommorris 4 years ago