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New books on
social capital and related topics
This section collects information I acquire about new books, reports,
other new publications on social capital and related topics. Authors
aiming to publicize their work on this web site can write
me to post announcements in this section. Links to these works
will appear also in the home page for some
time. For news on Conferences, workshops and Call for papers, please
go to the Upcoming Conferences
section.
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Posted April 14, 2009 (Thanks to Alice O’Mahoney)
Gert Tinggard Svendsen and Gunnaar Lind Haase Svendsen, Handbook of Social Capital. The Troika of Sociology, Political Science and Economics, Edward Elgar Publishing.
The Handbook of Social Capital balances the ‘troika’ of sociology, political science and economics by offering important contributions to the study of bonding and bridging social capital networks. This inter-disciplinary Handbook intends to serve as a bridge for students and scholars within all the social sciences. The contributors explore the different scientific approaches that are all needed if international research is to embrace both the bright and the more shadowy aspects of social capital.
Contributors: T.K. Ahn, T.M. Bertilsson, C. Bjørnskov, D.D. Caulkins, R. Chase, R.N. Christensen, G.S. Epstein, L.P. Feld P. Graeff, P. Gundelach, F. Herreros, C. Hjorth-Andersen, V.N. Jones, H. Jordahl, N. Letki, P. Nannestad, E. Ostrom, M. Paldam, R. Patulny, M.B. Petersen, A. Poulsen, A. Roepstorff, B. Rothstein, F. Sabatini, S. Serritzlew, K.M. Sønderskov, G.T. Svendsen, G.L.H. Svendsen, E.M. Uslaner, R. Weber, M. Woolcock.
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Posted March 20, 2009 (Thanks to Douglas Tedford)
Douglas Tedford, Social Capital and Internet Usage of Rural Guatemalan Teachers: Participatory Rural Appraisal Interviews and Group Assessments to Enhance Community-Driven Development for Online Teacher Education, VDM Verlag Dr. Müller.
This qualitative study examined Internet usage by Guatemalan English teachers in the rural, indigenous community of San Lucas Toliman, to improve enrollments and persistence in online teacher professional development programs promoted by the Fundación Rigoberta Menchú Tum in collaboration with the researcher.
Please follow the link for further details and to purchase the book.
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Posted February 12, 2009 (Thanks to Jouni Häkli)
Jouni Häkli and Claudio Minca (2008), Social Capital & Urban Networks of Trust, Ashgate, Farnham, UK.
This is the first book on social capital and trust informed by a critical geographical perspective. The authors examine the role of social capital in the constitution and reproduction of urban networks of trust in different places and contexts. They explore how social capital and trust are reflected in the capacity of these networks to achieve their goals and to deliver specific forms of urban development in a number of Finnish and Italian cities. Finland and Italy present, in many ways, two almost paradigmatic cases of how social capital and trust can work in extremely different and yet very effective ways in the production of the urban. They are two almost ideal laboratories for experimenting new definitions and new understandings of the concepts in question.
Please follow the link for further details and to purchase the book.
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Posted January 27, 2009 (Thanks to Simone Borghesi)
Simone Borghesi and Alessandro Vercelli (2008), Global Sustainability. Social and Environmental Conditions, Palgrave MacMillan.
This topical book discusses the extent to which the post-war process of globalization may be considered consistent with the basic requisites of sustainable development. The ongoing debate surrounding this important issue has generated widespread interest but has also polarized public opinion into two opposing camps: those in favour of or against globalization, and those concerned or unconcerned with the requisites of sustainable development.
This book seeks to prove that these two concepts are not mutually exclusive, and that the current polarized debate is damaging and misleading. Through exploring the conceptual foundations of the issues, as well as comprehensively analysing data and country experiences, the book provides a rational overview of the relationship between the ongoing processes of globalization and sustainable development, and offers guidance on the best policies to keep them under control. The authors offer suggestions on how economic, social and environmental policies might be redirected to eliminate, or at least mitigate, the adverse effects of globalization while strengthening its positive influences on the sustainability of world development. Drawing extensively on empirical information, and covering aspects such as global warming, energy trends, inequality and health, this book is a vital companion for academics and policymakers active in this area.
Please follow the link to learn more and purchase the book.
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Posted January 27, 2009 (thanks to Ben K. Daniel)
Ben K. Daniel (2009), Social Capital Modeling in Virtual Communities: Bayesian Belief Network Approaches.
Throughout history, the permeation of new technologies have assisted communities
in their aim to collectively work together in addressing shared
problems for the attainment of specific goals and outcomes.
Social Capital Modeling in Virtual Communities: Bayesian Belief
Network Approaches broadly examines what constitutes social capital in
geographical communities and offers an in-depth description of its potential
in virtual communities. Providing the latest findings for advanced undergraduate
and graduate students as well as researchers and academicians
involved with virtual communities and social capital, this book draws upon
insights from interdisciplinary fields such as artificial intelligence, human
computer interaction, educational technology, and economics and sociology.
Please follow the link to learn more and purchase the book.
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Posted January 9, 2009 (thanks to Eric Uslaner)
Dario Castiglione, Jan W. van Deth and Guglielmo Wolleb (2008), Handbook of Social Capital, Oxford University Press.
After twenty years of rapid expansion it is time for a more considered and critical assessment of how the concept of social capital has been adapted and refined, and how successful its application has been. The Handbook of Social Capital intends to do precisely that. It offers a state-of-the-art view of discussions about the concept of social capital and the way in which it has been applied in empirical research.
The organization of the Handbook reflects this intention by focusing on conceptual development and analysis in the first part; by identifying two main areas of research in which social capital has favoured the development of new and influential research programmes - political participation in democratic societies, and economic development; and by exploring the more normative and policy oriented consequences of social capital. All chapters comprising the volume were specifically written for the Handbook by some of the main experts in the fields. The book provides authoritative and innovative introduction to the study of social capital.
Please follow the link for further details.
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Posted October 17, 2008 (thanks to David Truscello)
David Keith Truscello (2008), It Is not What You Know But Whom You Know:
Expanding Student Social Capital Networks of Knowledge through Critical
Pedagogy, Saarbrücken.
Because people learn within social capital networks, an educational praxis
is needed within families and schools that develops student critical
consciousness about why and how to expand ties to new learning communities
of exemplars. Such praxis would involve both overtly negotiating truth
claims about culture and class in classroom discussions and also placing
students in learning situations of legitimate peripheral participation
within communities beyond their initial personal reach. Through critical
pedagogy, participants in this study discovered that they were able to
reflect on their situation in the world and to plan for social action to
transform their situation by developing their own unique social capital
networks of success and fulfillment.
Please follow the link for further details.
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Posted October 17, 2008 (thanks to Prasenjit Maiti)
K.R. Gupta, Gunnar Lind Haase Svendsen and Prasenjit Maiti, Social Capital, Vol. I and II, New Delhi, Atlantic, 2008.
Vol. I. Preface. 1. Social capital--an overview/K.R. Gupta. 2. Introduction of increasing scientific horsepower: social capital, cross-disciplinarity, and trust/Gunnar Lind Haase Svendsen. 3. The role of social capital within regeneration; can building social capital benefit regeneration contexts? a review of the literature/Louise Warwick-Booth. 4. Defining social capital/David Conrad. 5. Social capital formation in rural, urban and suburban communities/David L. Debertin and Stephan J. Goetz. 6. Managing through social capital: the importance of social capital for women in combating social exclusion/Victoria Gosling. 7. Social capital: provoking promising and problematic/Gunnar Lind Haase Svendsen. 8. Social capital and community heterogeneity/Hilde Coffe. 9. Gendering social capital theory/Sam Wong. 10. Some reflections on gift theory and social capital/Anne Gray. 11. Non-profit organizations, social capital and regional economic growth/Jesus Clemente; Carmen Marcuello and Fernando Pueyo. 12. Public sculpture and community social capital generation/David Conrad. 13. The role of social capital in research participation/Sally Lindsay and Simon Smith. Bibliography. Contributors.
Vol. II. Preface. 1. Engendering social capital: women workers and rural-urban networks in Indonesia's crisis/Rachel Silvey and Rebecca Elmhirst. 2. Trust and family/Eric M. Uslaner. 3. Trust and consequences/Eric M. Uslaner. 4. Knowledge sharing for developing social capital/Tapomoy Deb. 5. Complex cultures: rereading the story about health and social capital/Sara C. MacKian. 6. Do social trusters like immigrants? The impact of social capital on people's attitudes towards immigration/Francisco Herreros. 7. Social cohesion as factor in development/Ivor Chipkin. 8. The contribution of income, social capital, and institutions to human well-being in Africa/Mina Baliamoune-Lutz and Stefan Lutz. Contributors.
Please follow the link for further details and to purchase the book.
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Posted October 17, 2008 (thanks to Arnaldo Pellini)
Arnaldo Pellini (2008), The Complexity of Decentralisation Reforms, VDM Verlag Dr. Muller Aktiengesellschaft & Co. KG.
Synopsis
This book analyses the characteristics of community participation in Cambodian rural schools. It looks at the spaces for participation created by the decentralisation reforms that the government of Cambodia has undertaken in the education sector through two main policies: school clustering and Priority Action Programme. While institutionalised spaces of participation created by these policies are relatively new, Cambodian communities, despite twenty five years of political turmoil, have traditionally provided support to schools through school associations. The study refers to bonding, bridging, and institutional social capital to explore, respectively, the characteristics of the horizontal links between community members as well as different forms of collective action, and the vertical links between community, schools and local government institutions. The analysis should be especially useful to academics, researchers, policy makers, and development practitioners involved and interested in the complexity of the link between participation and local governance reforms.
Arnaldo Pellini (PhD), is an economist who joined the Overseas Development Institute in London in June 2008 after two years working for UNDP on a programme to improve research management and policy engagement at the Vietnamese Academy for Social Science and almost six years in Nepal and Cambodia where he worked on local governance.
Please follow the link for further details.
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Posted October 17, 2008 (thanks to Joseph D. Lewandowski)
Joseph D. Lewandowski and Milan Znoj (2008), Trust and Transitions. Social Capital in a Changing World, Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Employing a range of empirical and theoretical
approaches, contributors to this volume examine the
nature and function of trust from within the framework of
social capital theory. The empirically oriented chapters
focus on post-Communist countries, including Serbia and
Montenegro, Romania and, especially, the Czech
Republic. Indeed, the collection contains an entire section
devoted to analyzing trust and transition in the wake of the “velvet revolution.” The theoretical chapters engage
the work of Tocqueville, Putnam, and Uslaner, among
others, as they seek to clarify and rethink what in fact
trust is, where trust originates, the causal relevance of
trust for successful marketization and democratization,
and the extent to which existing conceptions of social
capital can be adequately deployed in diverse contexts.
Joseph D. Lewandowski is a former US Fulbright
Scholar in the Department of Political Science at Charles
University and professor of philosophy at the University
of Central Missouri. He is the author of Interpreting
Culture: Rethinking Method and Truth in Social Theory
(University of Nebraska Press), as well as articles on
social capital and political theory that have appeared in
the Journal of Poverty, Journal of Social Philosophy, and
European Journal of Social Theory.
Milan Znoj is professor and chair of the Department of
Political Science at Charles University and a researcher in
the Institute of Philosophy at the Czech Academy of
Sciences. He is the editor of Josef Lux a česká politika 90.
let (Josef Lux and Czech Politics in the 1990s), as well as
the author of numerous books and articles on political
theory, liberalism, and civil society.
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Posted September 29, 2008 (thanks to Matthew Nicholson)
Matthew Nicholson and Russell Hoye (2008), Sport and Social Capital, London: Butterworth-Heinemann.
Despite the importance of sport as a social, economic and political institution, research into sport and social capital has not been extensive. Sport and Social Capital is the first book to examine this increasingly high profile area in detail. It explores the ways in which sport contributes to the creation, development, maintenance and, in some cases, diminution of social capital. Written by an internationally renowned author team who are leading figures in this area of study, this engaging and far-reaching text brings leading research from around the world into one comprehensively edited volume. Themes covered in the book include: education, gender, policy, community, youth sport, diversity and many more. It is essential reading for sport management, sport development and sport sociology students around the globe and offers fascinating and invaluable insight to interested stakeholders from industry, community and government.
Table of Contents
1 Sport and social capital: An introduction, Matthew Nicholson and Russell Hoye
Part One Concepts and Contexts
2 Avoiding the numbers game: Social theory, policy and sport's role in the art of relationship building, Tim Crabbe
3 Sport-in-development: Development for and through sport?, Fred Coalter
4 Locating social capital in sport policy, Russell Hoye and Matthew Nicholson
5 Narrowing the gap through sport, education and social capital?, Grant Jarvie
Part Two Clubs and Community Sport Organizations
6 Community sport networks, Alison Doherty and Katie Misener
7 Voluntary sport clubs: The potential for the development of social capital, Chris Auld
8 Community sport/recreation members and social capital measures in Sweden and Australia, Kevin M. Brown
9 Volunteering in community sport organizations: Implications for social capital, Graham Cuskelly
Part Three Sport and Social Capital in Action
10 Sport ' s ambiguous relationship with social capital: The contribution of national governing bodies of sport, Jonathan Long
11 Public policies, social capital and voluntary sport, Ørnulf Seippel
12 Race equality and sport networks: Social capital links, Kevin Hylton
13 Stepping into community? The impact of youth sport volunteering on young people ' s social capital, Steven Bradbury and Tess Kay
14 Soccer and social capital in Australia: Social networks in transition, Daniel Lock, Tracy Taylor and Simon Darcy
15 Sport facilities as social capital, Mark Rosentraub and Akram Ijla.
Please follow the link to purchase the book from Elsevier's web site.
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Posted July 26, 2008 (thanks to Lilia Costabile)
Lilia Costabile, Institutions for Social Well Being. Alternatives for Europe, Palgrave Macmillan.
Table of contents
Introduction; L.Costabile
European Union Social Policy in a Globalising Context; A.B.Atkinson
Conditions of Social Vulnerability, Work and Low Income: Evidence for Europe in Comparative Perspective; T.Munzi & T.Smeeding
The Enforcement-Equality Tradeoff; S.Bowles & A.Jayadev
Insurance, Redistribution and the Welfare State: Economic Theory and International Comparisons; R.Artoni& A.Casarico
Social Models, Growth and Key Currencies; L.Costabile& R.Scazzieri
Care Regimes and the European Employment Rate; F.Bettio& J.Plantenga
The Swedish Model in the Era of Integration and Globalisation; B.Gustafsson
Cultural Diversity and Economic Solidarity; M.D'Antoni& U.Pagano
Conclusion; L.Costabile
Please follow the link to purchase the book from Macmillan's web site.
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Posted July 1, 2008 (thanks to Eric Uslaner)
Eric M. Uslaner, Corruption, Inequality, and the Rule of Law: The Bulging Pocket Makes the Easy Life, Cambridge University Press, 2008.
Corruption flouts rules of fairness and gives some people advantages that others don't have. Corruption is persistent; there is little evidence that countries can escape the curse of corruption easily-or at all. Instead of focusing on institutional reform, Uslaner suggests that the roots of corruption lie in economic and legal inequality and low levels of generalized trust (which are not readily changed) and poor policy choices (which may be more likely to change). Economic inequality provides a fertile breeding ground for corruption-and, in turn, it leads to further inequalities. Just as corruption is persistent, inequality and trust do not change much over time in my cross-national aggregate analyses. Uslaner argues that high inequality leads to low trust and high corruption, and then to more inequality-an inequality trap and identifies direct linkages between inequality and trust in surveys of the mass public and elites in transition countries.
Eric M. Uslaner is Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland-College Park, where he has taught since 1975. He has written seven books including The Moral Foundations of Trust (Cambridge University Press, 2002), and The Decline of Comity in Congress (University of Michigan Press, 1993). In 1981-82 he was Fulbright Professor of American Studies and Political Science at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel and in 2005, he was a Fulbright Senior Specialist Lecturer at Novosibirsk State Technical University, Novosibirsk, Siberia, Russia. In 2006 he was appointed the first Senior Research Fellow at the Center for American Law and Political Science at the Southwest University of Political Science and Law, Chongqing, China.
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Posted July 1, 2008 (thanks to Marta Nachtmannova)
What does "European citizenship" mean to Europeans?, Flash Eurobarometer Survey No. 213.
A Flash Eurobarometer survey on European Union citizenship (No 213), commissioned by the European Commission, asked citizens of the EU to clarify how familiar they are with their status as an EU citizen, and the various rights they possess through this second “nationality”.
The survey’s fieldwork was carried out between 14 and 18 November 2007. Over 27000 randomly selected citizens aged 15 years and above were interviewed in the 27 Member States of the European Union. Interviews were predominantly carried out via fixed telephone, approximately 1000 in each country. Part of the interviews in Finland and Austria were carried out over mobile telephones. Due to the relatively low fixed telephone coverage in the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia, we sampled and interviewed 300 persons face to face as well.
Among main findings:
Although the majority (78%) of EU citizens claim familiarity with the term “citizen of the European Union”, only 41% say they know its meaning and less than one-third (31%) of respondents from the 27 EU countries consider themselves well informed about their rights as citizens of the European Union.
Please follow the link to download the full report in Pdf format.
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Posted May 13, 2008 (thanks to Marc Morjé Howard)
"Symposium on Civic Engagement and Civic Attitudes in Cross-National Perspective",
Political Studies, March 2008 - Vol. 56, No. 1
Guest-edited by Marc Morjé Howard and Dietlind Stolle
Dietlind Stolle and Marc Morjé Howard, "Civic Engagement and Civic Attitudes in Cross-National Perspective: Introduction to the Symposium"
Marc Morjé Howard and Leah Gilbert, "A Cross-National Comparison of the Internal Effects of Participation in Voluntary Organizations"
Jack Citrin and John Sides, "Immigration and the Imagined Community in Europe and the United States"
Dietlind Stolle, Stuart Soroka, and Richard Johnston, "When Does Diversity Erode Trust? Neighborhood Diversity, Interpersonal Trust and the Mediating Effect of Social Interactions"
Russell J. Dalton, "Citizenship Norms and the Expansion of Political Participation"
For more information on the U.S. CID survey - including the questionnaire, results, data, and a public report on the key findings - see www.uscidsurvey.org. The individual articles and the full symposium are also available on the website in PDF format.
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Posted May 13, 2008 (thanks to Maria Semitel Garcia)
María Semitiel García, Social Capital, Networks, and Economic Development. An Analysis of Regional Productive Systems, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2008.
This book analyses productive systems from a structural relational
perspective, linking the structure and evolution of productive systems to
economic development. An epistemological approach is adopted, which
considers the social nature of economic actors and the importance of
historical and geographical aspects.
María Semitiel García uses the structure and evolution of an agro-food and
a metal-mechanical regional productive system to illustrate the benefits of
adopting the network perspective as a methodological approach in economic
research. The existence and persistence of inter-regional development
differences, the structure of production systems, the role of services in these systems and the role
of social capital in development are also discussed.
Highlighting a holistic and comprehensive study of productive systems and its relationship with
development, this book will strongly appeal to a wide-ranging audience, encompassing those
with a special interest in regional development, institutional economics, industrial economics and
policy, social network analysis and economic sociology.
Please follow the link to download the book's flyer.
Please follow the link to purchase the book.
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Posted May 6, 2008 (thanks to Sam Wong)
Sam Wong, Exploring Unseen Social Capital in Community Participation. Everyday Lives of Poor Mainland Chinese Migrants in Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2007.
This book argues that using social capital to eradicate poverty is less likely to succeed because the mainstream neo-institutional approach mistakenly assumes that social capital necessarily benefits poor people. This inadequacy calls for a re-assessment of human motivations, institutional dynamics and structural complexity in social capital building.
Exploring ‘Unseen' Social Capital in Community Participation: Everyday Lives of Poor Mainland Chinese Migrants in Hong Kong proposes a ‘pro-poor' social capital perspective, highlighting poverty-specific outcomes in collective action. The ‘agency-institution-structure' framework is suggested in order to explore the mechanisms facilitating and constraining different groups of poor people in gaining access to social capital.
Using ethnographic and participatory methods, this book calls for an exploration of ‘unseen' social capital. ‘Unseen' social capital highlights the nature of everyday co-operation which is shaped by social norms, influenced by conscious and less-conscious motivations, and subject to livelihood priority changes. As such this book is useful to policy makers and practitioners.
Sam Wong is lecturer in the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds, UK. He obtained the ICAS Book Prize ‘Best Dissertation Award' at ICAS 4 in Shanghai in 2005.
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Posted April 23, 2008 (thanks to Ryszard Zukowski)
Ryszard Zukowski, Social Capital and Challenges of Development
In Latin America and East Central Europe, Warsav University, Center for Latin-American Studies, 2008.
This book focuses on two main issues. First, it attempts to synthesize and appraise explorations of social capital, and particularly its origins. Second, it undertakes a comparative study of social capital between Latin America and East Central Europe, which we find similar in many meaningful respects. Owing to their historical and civilizational specificity, we have determined Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus to be beyond the scope of this study. Thus, the extent of the East Central European sample roughly coincides with the prevailing definition of this region in the literature on this topic.
Please follow the link to download the introduction.
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Posted April 23, 2008 (thanks to Francisco Herreros)
Francisco Herreros, The Problem of Forming Social Capital. Why Trust?, New York: Palgrave 2004; paperback edition 2008.
The book examines from the gound up, and from first principles, how social capital is formed. It uses game theoretical models to highlight mechanisms facilitating the formation of trust and, in contrast to many theorists, Herreros places emphasis on the role of the state in the creation of social capital. The theoretical arguments are tested empirically using survey data and historical cases.
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Posted September, 4, 2007 (thanks to Antonella Noya)
Emma Clarence and Antonella Noya (eds), Social economy. Building inclusive economies, OECD.
The OECD LEED Programme is about to release a new publication on social economy, "Social economy. Building inclusive economies. The book is edited by Antonella Noya and Emma Clarence.
This publication offers new insights into the economic theory of social economy organisations, their role in an evolving political and economic context, and the links to local development and the empowerment of users. Building on theoretical and empirical developments in OECD member countries, the publication also presents the main challenges for the social economy in Central East and South East Europe. Recommendations for action are included.
The book is essential reading for policy-makers, practitioners and scholars interested in the latest theoretical and empirical developments in the field of social economy in OECD member and non-member countries.
Follow the link to see the table of contents.
Follow the link to purchase the book at a significantly reduced rate (please note that the cut off date for discounted copies is October 10th).
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Posted September, 4, 2007
Mike Osborne, Kate Sankey and Bruce Wilson (eds), Social Capital, Lifelong Learning and the Management of Place: An International Perspective, London and New York, Routledge.

This book brings together inter-related research literature from three fields, social capital, place management and lifelong learning regions. It builds on two previous research-based volumes (and a third volume also in planning) on themes within the domain of lifelong learning. In this case it links this area to the management of place and the development of learning at a regional level. Specifically, drawing upon and developing presentations made at the third international PASCAL Observatory (see http://www.obs-pascal.com) conference in October 2005, it presents research on the development and implementation of policies and practices that improve the quality of living and working circumstances at local and regional levels, recognising the importance of social capital and the necessity of partnership for the successful implementation of policy. The book focuses on regional initiatives, particularly those which explicitly embrace lifelong learning, as a framework for developing a systematic planning framework that may encompass administrative, cultural, geographical, physical and/or political perspectives. Like the work of the PASCAL Observatory itself this involves looking at life from the perspective of people and places, rather than separate programs delivered for them.
Contents
Section 1: 1. Introduction (Mike Osborne, Kate Sankey and Bruce Wilson). 2. The Question of Measurement - The Role of Quantitative Approaches (Ralph Catts). 3. Qualitative Research Legitimacy: What Counts as ‘Evidence’ For Policy Makers and Researchers Working Together? (Ian Falk and Scott Knight). Section 2: Social Capital 4. Researching Community Capital for Public Management (Michael Hess and David Adams). 5. Community Efficacy and Social Capital: Modelling how Communities Deliver Outcomes for Members (Sue Kilpatrick and Joan Abbott-Chapman). 6. Identity, Local Community and the Internet (Duncan Timms). 7. The Empirics of Social Capital and Economic Development (Fabio Sabatini). Section 3: Learning Regions 8. Learning Regions, Co-operation and Networks – Network Analysis as a Tool for Evaluating Structures of Interaction in Continuing Education (Wolfgang Jütte). 9. Communities of Practice and Purpose: Making Knowledge Work in the University-Industry Interface (Tony Hall). 10. Learning Cape Aspirations: the Idea of a Learning Region and the Use of Indicators in a Middle-Income Country (Shirley Walters). 11. Lifelong Learning – Institutionalisation and Regulating Mechanisms (Kornelia Eftimova Ilieva). Section 4: Place Management 12. Place Centric and Future Oriented Learning in the Local Village Context – Making the Village a Virtual Campus (Erik Wallin). 13. Cities as engines of growth (Larry Swanson and Pat Inman). 14. Policy Considerations to Address the Social Implications of Increased Commodification of Public Places (Theresia Williams) 15. Community, place and learning (Greg Mannion and Lesley Doyle). 16. Lifelong Learning and Sustainable Development (Corinne van Beilen, Max van der Kamp, Stijn Tebbes and Jacques Zeelen). Section 5: 17. Conclusions (Mike Osborne, Kate Sankey and Bruce Wilson).
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Posted September, 4, 2007 (thanks to Nan Lin)
Nan Lin, and Bonnie
Erickson, (Eds), Social Capital.
An International Research Program, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
The volume brings together some of the leading scholars around the world working on social capital to study how individuals
and groups access and use their social relations and social connections to do better in society in order to achieve their goals.
The volumen includes contributions by Nan Lin,
Bonnie Erickson,
Martin Van der Gaag,
Tom A. B. Snijders,
Henk Flap,
Yang-chih Fu,
Beate Völker,
Yanjie Bian,
Dan Ao,
Hester Moerbeek,
Sandra Susan Smith,
René Bekkers,
Kakuko Miyata,
Ken'ichi Ikeda,
Tetsuro Kobayashi,
Ray-May Hsung,
Yi-Jr Lin,
Sandra Enns,
Todd Malinick,
Ralph Matthews,
D. B. Tindall,
Jeffrey J. Cormier,
Marc Porter Magee,
Gina Lai,
ennifer L. Moren-Cross,
Catherine A. Johnson,
Róbert Angelusz,
Róbert Tardos.
Please follow the link to open the flyer and purchase the book with a 20% discount.
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Posted September, 4, 2007 (thanks to Sofia Correia)
Sofia Correia,
Social Capital and Civic Community, the virtuous circle of citizenship.
Applying the Putnam model to Caselas residents.
This study compares the social capital level of two populations living in Caselas (Lisbon, Portugal): Housing Cooperative residents and Estado Novo villas residents. The results were also compared with national indicators. Results showed that the two groups had similar social capital levels, due to a proximity relation (namely of family ties).
We identified, however, significant differences between Caselas neighbourhood and Portuguese population in general. Caselas residents scored very high in important indicators - such as social trust, social networks and political participation - when compared with national population.
We conclude, therefore, that there is social capital in Caselas and that it is not confined to the Cooperative inhabitants, but is also evident among the villas residents.
The book is in Portoguese. The original title is: "Capital Social e Comunidade Cívica, o círculo virtuoso da cidadania. Aplicação do Modelo de Putnam aos residentes do Bairro de Caselas".
Brief Portoguese presentation
Este trabalho compara os níveis de capital social de dois grupos populacionais residentes no Bairro de Caselas: moradores na Cooperativa de Habitação Económica, Caselcoop, e residentes nas moradias construídas pelo Estado Novo. Os resultados dos Habitantes de Caselas foram, também, comparados com alguns indicadores nacionais.
Please follow the link to purchase the book.
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Posted May, 7, 2007 (thanks to Don Tapscott)
Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams, Wikinomics. How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything, Penguin Books, 2007.

In the last few years, traditional collaboration—in a meeting room, a conference call, even a convention center—has been superceded by collaborations on an astronomical scale.
Today, encyclopedias, jetliners, operating systems, mutual funds, and many other items are being created by teams numbering in the thousands or even millions. While some leaders fear the heaving growth of these massive online communities, Wikinomics proves this fear is folly. Smart firms can harness collective capability and genius to spur innovation, growth, and success.
A brilliant primer on one of the most profound changes of our time, Wikinomics challenges our most deeply-rooted assumptions about business and will prove indispensable to anyone who wants to understand the key forces driving competitiveness in the twenty-first century.
Based on a $9 million research project led by bestselling author Don Tapscott, Wikinomics shows how the masses of people can participate in the economy like never before. They are creating TV news stories, sequencing the human genome, remixing their favorite music, designing software, finding a cure for disease, editing school texts, inventing new cosmetics, and even building motorcycles.
You’ll read about:
- Rob McEwen, the Goldcorp, Inc. CEO, former investment banker, and gold mining newbie, who used open source tactics and an online competition to breathe new life into a struggling business cobbled by the rules of an old-fashioned industry.
- Flickr, Second Life, YouTube, and other thriving online communities that transcend social networking to pioneer a new form of collaborative production that will revolutionize markets and firms.
- Smart, multibillion dollar companies like Procter & Gamble that cultivate nimble, trust-based relationships with external collaborators to form vibrant business ecosystems that create value more effectively than hierarchically organized businesses.
An important look into the future, Wikinomics will be your road map for doing business in the twenty-first century.
(from Wikinomics' web site).
Follow the link to buy the book.
Follow the link to visit Wikinomics web site.
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Posted May, 7, 2007 (thanks to Johann Graf Lambsdorff)
Johann Graf Lambsdorff, The Institutional Economics of Corruption and Reform, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Corruption has been a feature of public institutions for centuries yet only relatively recently has it been made the subject of sustained scientific analysis. Lambsdorff shows how insights from institutional economics can be used to develop a better understanding of why corruption occurs and the best policies to combat it. He argues that rather than being deterred by penalties, corrupt actors are more influenced by other factors such as the opportunism of their criminal counterparts and the danger of acquiring an unreliable reputation. This suggests a novel strategy for fighting corruption similar to the invisible hand that governs competitive markets. This strategy - the ‘invisible foot’ - shows that the unreliability of corrupt counterparts induces honesty and good governance even in the absence of good intentions. Combining theoretical research with state-of-the-art empirical investigations, this book will be an invaluable resource for researchers and policy-makers concerned with anti-corruption reform.
• Provides a novel approach to anti-corruption
• Links reform to evidence using state-of-the-art empirical research
• Numerous case studies delve into the real world of corruption
Please follow the link for further details and to purchase the book.
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Posted March, 23, 2007 (thanks to Blaz Lenarcic)
Frane Adam (ed), Social Capital and Governance.
Old and New Members of the EU in Comparison. LIT Verlag Münster-Hamburg-Berlin-Wien-London-Zürich.
The intention of the contributions is to focus on some key aspects of social capital in the context of civic participation, governance and civil society at both national and EU levels. The role of new EU members is particularly stressed.
The texts aim to demonstrate how social capital in the form of co-operative norms and actions facilitates the self-organisation of civil society and its internal ability to articulate policy relevant alternative proposals. The efficiency and responsiveness of governance at different - local, national, transnational - levels are also addressed.
Besides theoretical reconsiderations, the authors draws attention to the issue of the quality of data and greater methodological reflexivity.
Please follow the link for further details and to purchase the book.
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Posted March, 23, 2007 (thanks to Frank Thomas)
Ben Anderson, Malcolm Brynin, Yoel Raban, and Jonathan Gershuny (eds), Information and Communications Technologies in Society: E-Living in a Digital Europe, London: Routledge.
There is a growing body of work examining the ‘consequences’, or more accurately the inter-relationships between information and communications technologies (ICTs) and society at the microsocial (individual, household) level. The vast majority of this work has so far been focused on the US and the subsequent publications have consequently provided predominantly US-centred analyses.
This book will re-dress this balance by providing analyses of the situation in Europe and is associated states and placing the analyses in the context of both European and International research and policy debates. The book uses data from a range of European countries as well as comparisons with Asia and the USA.
The book includes the following chapters treating questions of social capital:
Heres, Jeroen and Frank Thomas : Civic participation and ICTs
Anderson, Ben : Social Capital, Quality of Life and Information and Communication Technologies.
Ling, Rich : Informal Social Capital and ICTs.
Please check Routledge's web site for further details and to purchase the book.
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Posted March, 14, 2007 (thanks to Irene van Staveren)
Review of Social Economy, special issue on social capital edited by Irene van Staveren, Volume 65, Issue 1, 2007.
This special issue includes articles by Peter Knorringa and Irene van Staveren, Tom Schuller, Bart Nootebom, Bengt Johannisson; Lena Olaison, and Phil Cooke.
Please follow the link to see full contents and purchase the journal on Routledge's web site.
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Posted February, 14, 2007 (thanks to Ric Uslaner)
Eric Uslaner, The Bulging Pocket and the Rule of Law: Corruption, Inequality, and Trust (under contract to cambridge university Press).
The draft chapters and the full book manuscript, The Bulging Pocket and the Rule of Law: Corruption, Inequality, and Trust (under contract to Cambridge University Press), are available on Eric Uslaner's corruption web page.
Download the book prospectus.
Download the first paper, The Bulging Pocket and the Rule of Law.
Download drafts of Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, the references, the tables for these chapters, and the appendix tables.
Eric M. Uslaner is Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland--College Park, where he has taught since 1975. In 1997-1998 he was Distinguished University Research Fellow at the University of Maryland and in 1981-82 he was Fulbright Lecturer and Visiting Professor, Departments of American Studies and Political Science, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel. Professor Uslaner received his B.A. from Brandeis University cum laude with Honors in Politics in 1968 and his M.A. (1970) and Ph.D. (1973) in Political Science from Indiana University. In 2006 he was appointed the first Senior Research Fellow at the Center for American Law and Political Science at the Southwest University of Political Science and Law, Chongqing, China.
You can visit Eric M. Uslaner's web page for further information on his research activity and to download his latest papers.
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Posted January, 9, 2007 (thanks to Joseph D. Lewandowski)
Rosalind Edwards, Jane Franklin and Janet Holland, Assessing Social Capital: Concept, Policy and Practice, Taylor and Francis.
Social capital is a key concept in academic research and policymaking internationally. It focuses attention on social relationships, values, and access to resources in families, communities, regions and nations. But does the concept, with its focus on particular aspects of social life and the thrust of its influence on policy initiatives, hide more than it illuminates? Is it even harmful? Can social capital ideas be amended or adapted to bring other issues into view, or are there alternative concepts that are better able to address contemporary social, economic and political life?
This edited collection brings together contributions, including from internationally renowned researchers, that assess social capital - as a theoretical concept, its shaping of policy development, and its practices in research and everyday life. Some reveal the conceptual lacks and policy drawbacks of social capital, and put forward alternatives. Others pursue mainstream models and their adaptation.
Please check the flyer for further details and to order the book.
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Posted January, 9, 2007 (thanks to Norman Longworth)
Norman Longworth, Learning Cities,
Learning Regions,
Learning Communities.
Lifelong learning and local government, Taylor and Francis.
This indispensable and visionary book explores the mental and social landscape of the city of today and tomorrow. It describes the way in which organisations and people act, interact, learn and live with and among each other; the crucial role of local administrations, learning providers, workplaces and other stakeholders in creating a better vision of the future. ‘Learning Cities, Learning Regions, Learning Communities’ addresses the urgent need for a guide to the principles and practices of lifelong learning for everyone in the cities, towns and regions of every country. Among the many stimulating topics are:
What learning cities and regions are, how they are developing and the reasons why they are so important in today’s world
The many practical tools and techniques usable by cities, towns, regions and their stakeholders to energise participation, engage people and help create a culture of learning
The local, national and global role of cities and regions to help combat the blinkered ignorance, binding poverty and militant terror that aims to engulf us all
Please follow the link for further details and to order the book.
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Posted January, 2, 2007 (thanks to Hans Westlund)
Hans Westlund, Social Capital in the Knowledge Economy
Theory and Empirics, Springer.
This book analyzes the social capital of the growing knowledge economy. The theoretical part discusses social capital as an economic concept, its relation to traditional capital theory and its role as a spatial externality. A theory of the social capital of the enterprise is developed and social capital’s importance for entrepreneurship, innovation and regional development is analyzed. The empirical part compares some central aspects of social capital of three different socio-economic systems: the US, Japan and Sweden, regarding labor market relations, innovation systems and the civil societies. The social capitals of the knowledge intensive biotech industries of the three countries are studied and compared. Finally, a number of issues for further research are discussed.
Contents: Introduction.- Social Capital as an Economic Concept.- Social Capital as Capital in the Economic Sense.- Social Capital as a Spatial Externality.- The Social Capital of the Enterprise.- Social Capital and Entrepreneurship.- Social Capital and Innovation: Actors and Policies.- Why Compare Sweden, Japan and USA/California?- Social Capital Expressed in the Form of Labor Market Relations.- Social Capital and Institutions for Growth, Innovation and Renewal.- Civil Society’s Social Capital.- The Knowledge-Intensive Biotech Industry: Structures and Policies.- The Biotech Industry’s Social Capital: An Empirical Study.- Some Forward Looking Comments.
Please follow the link to check the flyer and order the book.
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Posted January, 2, 2007 (thanks to Jan van Deth)
Jan W. van Deth, José Ramón Montero, Anders Westholm, Citizenship and Involvement in
European Democracies.
A Comparative Analysis, London and New York: Routledge, 2006.
This unique study brings together a team of leading European researchers to
examine the results of a cross-national analysis of citizenship and participation
among citizens in twelve European democracies.
Research on the future and quality of contemporary democracy is usually restricted
to focus either on political participation, on particular aspects of citizenship, or on
social activities, exclusively. This new book offers the first empirical investigation of
the relationships between social and political involvement, and between ‘small-scale’
and ‘large-scale’ democracies.
Citizenship and Involvement in European Democracies offers representative
samples of the populations in a selection of European countries between 2000-2002,
including: Denmark, Germany, Moldova, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal,
Romania, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. It provides new
theoretical insights and offers a broad conceptualisation of citizenship, stimulating
the ongoing discussions about the problems and challenges of democratic political
systems.
This book has a companion volume entitled Social Capital and Associations in
European Democracies edited by William A. Maloney and Sigrid Roßteutscher
(Routledge, 2006). Both volumes will be of great interest to students and researchers
of European politics, comparative politics and sociology.
Please check the book's flyer to see contents and order the book.
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Posted March, 11, 2006 (thanks
to Gerard Breeman)
Hans-Hermann Höhmann and Friederike Welter, Trust
And Entrepreneurship. A West–East Perspective, Cheltenham:
Edward Elgar, 2005.
‘Free market ideology claims that entrepreneurship
thrives on competition, but cooperation and trust are also important
in fostering business growth. Where legal institutions are weak,
corruption and criminal enterprise can flourish. Honest businessmen
have to rely on personal networks, increasing the risk of collusion.
This path-breaking book explores the “light” and “dark”
sides of trust. By comparing transition economies with mature market
economies, the authors highlight the crucial contribution of trust
to business performance.’
– Mark Casson, University of Reading, UK
In this new book, international scholars investigate trust and
its role in relation to the entrepreneurial behaviour of small firms
across a variety of institutional and cultural settings (from the
publisher's web site).
Contents:
Introduction Part I: Concepts, Evolution, Measurements Part II:
Trust and Entrepreneurial Behaviour in Transition Environments Part
III: Trust and Entrepreneurial Behaviour in Mature Market Economies
Index Contributors: I. Akimova, R. Bachmann, L. Burroni, A. Chepurenko,
G. Dei Ottati, H.-H. Höhmann, D. Houser, T. Kautonen, B. Lageman,
J. Leland, X. Li, F. Lyon, E. Malieva, H. Nuissl, V. Radaev, J.
Shachat, A. Schwarz, G. Schwödiauer, D. Smallbone, G.T. Svendsen,
V. Tonoyan, H. van Ees, U. Venesaar, F. Welter.
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Posted March, 11, 2006 (thanks
to Gerard Breeman
Katinka Bijlsma-Frankema and Rosalinde Klein
Woolthuis, Trust
Under Pressure. Empirical Investigations of Trust and Trust Building
in Uncertain Circumstances, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2005.
This book challenges the current thinking on trust
largely based on studies in stable contexts, by presenting new empirical
studies of trust and trust building in a number of less stable,
less institutionalized settings. These contexts are gaining in prominence
given the globalization and virtualization of organizational relations,
development of high velocity markets, and the growing importance
of intangible resources. The empirical studies presented in this
book have been conducted by scholars with a wide variety of disciplinary
backgrounds, employing insights from a diverse range of fields including
organization theory, knowledge management, sociology, psychology,
economics, management, human resources management and communication
sciences. Data from twelve different countries, including Eastern
and Western European countries, Mexico, Tanzania and Western European
countries is analysed, illustrating relations within and between
organizations and nations. These organizations exist in environments
that can be typified as uncertain because institutional, taken-for-granted
or rational bases for control and trust are lacking. Several fresh
insights into how trust is built and sustained in uncertain circumstances
are presented, and relevant yet challenging directions for future
research are proposed.
Contributors:
K. Bijlsma-Frankema, K. Blomqvist, B. Busacca, H. Caljé,
S. Castaldo, D. de Gilder, A. Hoecht, P. Kerkhof, R. Klein Woolthuis,
T.M. Kühlmann, G. Möllering, E. Rocco, B.W. Rosendaal,
A. Rus, M. Tillmar, G. van de Bunt, N. Yahstal- Lapaix.
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Posted March, 11, 2006 (thanks
to Sandra Franke)
Policy Research Initiative, Social
Capital as a Public Policy Tool, Pricy Council of the Government
of Canada, Ottawa, 2005.
The Policy Research Initiative (PRI) of the Government of Canada has recently released the final
publications from its social capital project.
What is social capital? Who benefits – and who does not?
Is there a role for government? How can we measure it? Examining
the potential of the concept of social capital to inform policy
development and evaluation, the publications offer a clear framework
for the analysis of the concept, identify policy and program areas
where social capital makes a difference, and offer a strategic set
of recommendations for testing new approaches, improved measurement,
and policy action.
On the PRI's web site,
the following publications are available for free download:
Social Capital: A Tool for Public Policy. Briefing Note.
Provides a concise and accessible executive summary of the Project's
findings and recommendations.
Social Capital as a Public Policy Tool. Project Report.
Provides a detailed synthesis of the activities, findings, and recommendations.
Social Capital in Action. Thematic Policy Studies.
Provides an investigation of the role of social capital in eight
specific policy areas: poverty reduction, aging well, settlement
of new immigrants, education outcomes of Aboriginal youth, youth
civic engagement, community crime prevention, policing in First
Nations communities, community development.
Measurement of Social Capital. Reference Document for Public Policy
Research, Development, and Evaluation.
Provides a series of indicators, measurement tools and methodological
strategies, to investigate social capital in a public policy context
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Posted March, 7, 2006 (thanks
to Brenda O'Neill)
Brenda O’Neill and Elisabeth Gidengil, Gender
and Social Capital. New York: Routledge, 2006.
Since the publication of Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone, there has
been much scholarly literature devoted to the concept of social
capital. However, only a small portion of that literature is devoted
to its relationship with gender. In Gender and Social Capital, leading
scholars-including Pippa Norris, Ron Inglehart, and Theda Skocpol-provide
an in-depth analysis of two fundamental and hitherto neglected questions:
What can gender tell us about social capital? And what can social
capital tell us about women and politics? Gender and Social Capital
is essential reading for anyone interested in the relationship between
gender and civic engagement (from the publisher's web site).
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Posted March, 7, 2006 (thanks
to Dirk Hoerder)
Dirk Hoerder, Irina Schmitt and Yvonne Hébert, Negotiating
Transcultural Lives. Belongings and Social Capital among Youth in
Comparative Perspective, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2005.
Societies of the early 21st century are composed of many intersecting
cultures, defined by status as citizens or recent immigrants and
other societal hierarchies. Past-oriented segments of state populations
decry the loss of essentialized national identities. What is lacking
in this set-up of the
debate is the young generation. This volume brings together European
and Canadian studies in sociology, history, and cultural studies
(from the book's back cover).
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Posted February, 9, 2006 (thanks
to Mike Osborne)
Chris Duke, Mike Osborne and Bruce Wilson, Rebalancing
the social and economic. Learning, partnership and place, NIACE
(National Institute of Adult Continuing Education), Leicester, 2005.
This book examines the challenges facing those who make and implement
social policy at a time when free-trade economics reign supreme.
It draws on linked ideas of social capital and the management of
place, and presents international perspectives from a diverse range
of countries, to question the domination of the economic and call
for a new balance in making policy and measuring what is achieved.
Lifelong learning is said to be vital for a ‘knowledge society’
in the ‘new economy’. But looking at knowledge and the
economy alone short-changes us, making economic growth not a means
to happiness, but an end. The book moves from applied philosophical
analysis in Canada, through debate about social capital and ‘the
political’ in Australia, to consideration of governance for
sustained renewal in Finland. It examines how these concepts apply
as guides to action in a leading English local authority, Kent,
and considers the role of universities in developing learning regions
in South Africa’s Western Cape Province. It concludes with
the ‘mother of all challenges’, sustainability, with
which economic growth must reach a rapprochement if we are to survive.
The book should appeal to the widest possible range of social planners
at all levels of government, as well as to scholars in the fields
of social studies, management and administration. It is relevant
to those concerned with lifelong learning as this spills over the
walls of the classroom and the academy. It is also a book for all
of us who, as citizens, care about how we succeed or fail to govern
ourselves well, and how we learn from our mistakes (from the publisher's
web site).
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Posted February, 9, 2006 (thanks
to Ernesto Noronha
Ernesto Noronha, Ethnicity
in Industrial Organizations: Case of Two Organizations in Mumbai,
Jaipur, Rawat Publications, 2005.
This book examines the dynamics of ethnicity at the workplace –
an issue that has been largely ignored in the Indian context. The
belief that industrial development obliterates the relevance of
ethnic leanings, promoting instead a rational, secular and universalistic
outlook, is a contested one. This book, based on an empirical investigation
of the interface between ethnicity and industrial life in two organizations
in Mumbai, describes the obvious and subtle manifestations as well
as the implications of this complex social phenomenon. Through its
focus on the processes of recruitment and promotion in the studied
organizations, the book lends support to the view that ethnic affiliation
remains an inextricable part of the workplace. Even contemporary
organizations with a better educated workforce are not free of the
manipulations of basic group identity used by members of various
ethnic groups to their advantage. Through its insights into the
implications of the ethnic-industrial interface, the book emphasizes
the significance of managing diversity at work. (From the Book's
front flap).
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Posted January, 16, 2006
(thanks to Karen Cook)
Karen S. Cook, Russell Hardin and Margaret Levi, Cooperation
without Trust?, New York, Sage, 2005.
Some social theorists claim that trust is necessary for the smooth
functioning of a democratic society. Yet many recent surveys suggest
that trust is on the wane in the United States. Does this foreshadow
trouble for the nation? In Cooperation Without Trust? Karen Cook,
Russell Hardin, and Margaret Levi argue that a society can function
well in the absence of trust. Though trust is a useful element in
many kinds of relationships, they contend that mutually beneficial
cooperative relationships can take place without it.
Cooperation Without Trust? employs a wide range of examples illustrating
how parties use mechanisms other than trust to secure cooperation.
Concerns about one’s reputation, for example, could keep a
person in a small community from breaching agreements. State enforcement
of contracts ensures that business partners need not trust one another
in order to trade. Similarly, monitoring worker behavior permits
an employer to vest great responsibility in an employee without
necessarily trusting that person. Cook, Hardin, and Levi discuss
other mechanisms for facilitating cooperation absent trust, such
as the self-regulation of professional societies, management compensation
schemes, and social capital networks. In fact, the authors argue
that a lack of trust - or even outright distrust - may in many circumstances
be more beneficial in creating cooperation. Lack of trust motivates
people to reduce risks and establish institutions that promote cooperation.
A stout distrust of government prompted America’s founding
fathers to establish a system in which leaders are highly accountable
to their constituents, and in which checks and balances keep the
behavior of government officials in line with the public will. Such
institutional mechanisms are generally more dependable in securing
cooperation than simple faith in the trustworthiness of others.
Cooperation Without Trust? suggests that trust may be a complement
to governing institutions, not a substitute for them. Whether or
not the decline in trust documented by social surveys actually indicates
an erosion of trust in everyday situations, this book argues that
society is not in peril. Even if we were a less trusting society,
that would not mean we are a less functional one (from the publisher's
web site).
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Posted January, 16, 2006
(thanks to Susan Rose-Ackerman)
Susan Rose-Ackerman, From
Elections to Democracy. Building Accountable Government in Hungary
and Poland, Cambrdige, Cambridge University Press, 2005.
The countries of Central Europe in the first round for admission
to the European Union have all established constitutional, electoral
democracies and market economies. However, much remains to be done
to achieve fully consolidated democratic states. This study documents
the weaknesses of public oversight and participation in policymaking
in Hungary and Poland, two of the most advanced countries in the
region. It discusses five alternative routes to accountability including
European Union oversight, constitutional institutions such as presidents
and courts, devolution to lower-level governments, the use of neo-corporatist
bodies, and open-ended participation rights. It urges more emphasis
on the fifth option, public participation. Case studies of the environmental
movement in Hungary and of student groups in Poland illustrate these
general points. The book reviews the United States’ experience
of open-ended public participation and draws some lessons for the
transition countries from the strengths and weaknesses of the American
system. (from the publisher's flyer).
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Posted January, 16, 2006 (thanks
to Susan Rose-Ackerman)
János Kornai and Susan Rose-Ackerman, Building
a Trustworthy State in Post-Socialist Transition, New York,
Palgrave MacMillan, 2004.
Bringing together a top flight set of contributors,
this book considers the problems and prospects for creating trustworthy
and reliable public institutions since the transition from socialism
in Central and Eastern Europe. The focus is on "second generation"
issues of democratic consolidation in states where the basic structures
of the market and the state have been established. The contributors
raise important issues, such as corruption and participation, largely
neglected during the first stage of the transition and that are
of growing importance as several countries in the region move toward
entry into the European Union. Highlighting problems and prospects
of democratization with comparative import to other newly democratizing
areas, this volume draws on the experience of those who have lived
through and studied the transition and contrasts their insights
with those of generalist scholars who study government accountability
and democracy (from the publisher's web
site).
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Posted January, 16, 2006 (thanks
to Susan Rose-Ackerman)
János Kornai, Bo Rothstein, and Susan Rose-Ackerman, Creating
Social Trust in Post-Socialist Transition, New York, Palgrave
MacMillan.
One of the central characteristics of socialist states and societies
has been the absence of trust--between the state and the citizens,
and then among citizens themselves. The process of developing trust
is thus a major issue facing post-Socialist countries, and this
book brings together a group of leading scholars to examine barriers
to and bulwarks of trust in theoretical, cross-national, and topical
perspectives. From the distinctive paradox of illegal organizations--such
as the Mafiya--relying on trust within but undermining it without,
to the effects of transparency, the authors examine the bases of
trust and the effects of its presence or absence. Throughout the
analysis is grounded in the interaction of individuals and their
social, political, and economic environments (from the publisher's web
site).
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Posted January, 15, 2006 (thanks
to Herrington J. Bryce)
Herrington J. Bryce, Players
in the Public Policy Process. Nonprofits as Social Capital and Agents,
New York, Palgrave MacMillan.
This book focuses on the nonprofit organization as
a social capital asset and agent in all phases of the public policy
process--from influencing political parties, platforms, and choice
of candidates to the formulation and implementation of public policy
including the facilitation of transactions. This book demonstrates
the universal utility of the principal-agent paradigm for analyzing
nonprofits in foreign or domestic policy, sectarian or faith-based,
scientific or social as well as the regulatory (not just participatory)
powers of these organizations over market and nonmarket actions
as a matter of public, collective policy. Placing the nonprofit
in a principal-agent framework, the book emphasizes such topics
as sources of conflict in public expectations and organizational
performance, the moral hazard and benefits of organizational self-interest,
tax exemption as compensation or a reservation price rather than
just a subsidy, the role of social service organizations as managers
of adverse social risks, and their inherent competitive advantage
(even when faith-based) over firms as agents of choice for social
service contracts from a strictly business perspective. It also
deals with the role of nonprofits in governance such as over common
pool resources, the moral hazard of policy, and the probability
that the nonprofit could be an agent of distortions. This book goes
beyond the economics of market failure and adds political, policy
and administrative sciences, economic sociology, and the theory
of contracts to encapsulate these organizations as agents and essential
players in any open and democratic public policy process (from the
Publisher's web site).
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Posted December, 2, 2005
Benedetto Gui and Robert Sugden (Eds), Economics
and Social Interaction. Accounting for Intepersonal Relations,
Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2005
Economics and Social Interaction is a fresh attempt to overcome
the traditional inability of economics to deal with interpersonal
phenomena that occur within the sphere of markets and productive
organizations. It makes use of traditional economic concepts for
understanding interpersonal events, while venturing beyond those
concepts to give a better account of personalised interactions.
In contrast to other books, Economics and Social Interaction offers
the reader a rigorous effort at extending economic analysis to a
difficult field in a consistent manner, sensitive to insights from
other behavioural and social sciences. This collection represents
an important contribution to a growing research agenda in the social
sciences (from the publisher's presentation).
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Posted November, 8, 2005
(thanks to Bo Rothstein)
Bo Rothstein, Social
Traps and the Problem of Trust, Cambridge University Press,
2005.
A ‘social trap’ is a situation where individuals, groups
or organisations are unable to cooperate owing to mutual distrust
and lack of social capital, even where cooperation would benefit
all. Examples include civil strife, pervasive corruption, ethnic
discrimination, depletion of natural resources and misuse of social
insurance systems. Much has been written attempting to explain the
problem, but rather less material is available on how to escape
it. In this book, Bo Rothstein explores how social capital and social
trust are generated and what governments can do about it. He argues
that it is the existence of universal and impartial political institutions
together with public policies which enhance social and economic
equality that creates social capital. By introducing the theory
of collective memory into the discussion, Rothstein makes an empirical
and theoretical claim for how universal institutions can be established
(from the publisher's presentation).
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Posted October, 18, 2005 (thanks
to Johann Graf Lambsdorf)
Transparency International, Transparency
International (TI) 2005 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI),
Passau University and Transparency International, 2005.
On the Internet Centre for Corruption
Research web site it is available the main table containing
ranks, scores and further data for each country. All data for the
159 countries in the TI-CPI can also be retrieved in the form of
an Excel-Sheet . This sheet provides data also for another 35 countries.
Because there were less than three sources available, these 35 countries
are measured less reliably and not included in the official list.
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Posted October, 18, 2005 (thanks
to Blaz Lenarcic)
Frane Adam, Matej Makarovic, Borut Roncevic, Matevz Tomsic
(Eds), The
Challenges of Sustained Development: The Role of Socio-Cultural
Factors in East-Central Europe, Budapest: Central European University
Press, 2005.
How wide is the gap between the new democracies of Central and
Eastern Europe and the most developed nations? How can it be narrowed?
This book addresses these questions in a comprehensive way. It delves
into the inter-relations between the major factors of developmental
performance and looks at their effects on sustained societal development.
A vast amount of statistical data on social and economic factors
in selected European countries is grouped into 31 easy-to-handle
tables and analyzed along the following constructs: civilizational
competence; social capital; cognitive mobilization; quality of governance;
entrepreneurial spirit; social cohesion; and openness to the international
environment.
The analysis, based on theories and indicators of development, reveals
that, in spite of the progress since the fall of Communism, countries
in Central and Eastern Europe still fall short of having been transformed
into propulsive, "vibrant" societies, with intellectually
open-minded, socially and technologically innovative environments
(From the Book's front flap).
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Posted September, 25, 2005
(thanks to Xiangmin Chen)
Xiangming Chen, As
Borders Bend: Transnational Spaces on the Pacific Rim, Series:
Pacific Formations: Global Relations in Asian and Pacific Perspectives,
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., Lanham, MD, 2005.
This innovative book examines the complexities of de-bordering
and re-bordering through a structured comparison of seven transborder
subregions along the western Pacific Rim and an extended comparative
analysis of the U.S.-Mexico border and several European border regions.
Xiangming Chen offers a synthetic explanation for the complex and
diverse processes and outcomes of economic growth, social transformation,
infrastructure development, and urban landscapes in the new transnational
spaces around the porous and mutated borders on the Pacific Rim
and beyond (From the publisher's web site).
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Posted August, 20, 2005 (thanks
to Nelson Lara)
Nelson Lara, Capital social, partidos
polìticos y abstenciòn electoral. Perfil del abstencionista
desde la óptica del capital social, Ergatorre Libros,
Madrid, 2005.
Explorar las complejas relaciones entre cultura política,
capital social, democracia y gobernabilidad es uno de los grandes
retos de la ciencia política contemporánea, especialmente
con miras a los países que se encuentran en procesos de transformación
como es el caso de Venezuela. El estudio de Nelson Lara sobre la
asociación entre capital social y desencanto político
abre pistas para comprender esas relaciones.
(Friedrich Welsch, from the book's flyer)
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Posted August, 20, 2005 (thanks
to Robert Putnam)
David Halpern, Social
Capital, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2004.
The concept of 'social capital' is currently the focus of an explosion
of interest in the research and policy community. It refers to the
social networks, informal structures and norms that facilitate individual
and collective action. This explosion of interest is driven by a
growing body of evidence that social capital has enormous effects
on economic growth, health, crime and even the effectiveness and
functioning of governments. David Halpern provides a guide through
the many and sometimes confusing definitions of social capital.
The various literatures examining the empirical consequences of
social capital are brought together from across academic disciplines
to demonstrate a remarkable range of effects. A model is then presented
to account for the causal pathways that create social capital, and
that lead from social capital to its outcomes. International evidence
is used to establish whether social capital is on the decline, and
the thorny question of whether social capital can harm or exclude
is also examined. Finally, the policy implications are considered,
including how social capital can be measured, created and utilised.
Social Capital offers an overview of one of the most important and
exciting areas to emerge out of the social sciences in many years.
It assumes no previous knowledge of the literature or statistics,
and will be of interest to students and researchers in politics,
sociology, social administration and social psychology (from the
book's flyer).
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Posted June, 29, 2005 (thanks
to John Field)
John Field, Social capital and lifelong
learning, The Policy Press, Bristol, UK, 2005.
Social capital and lifelong learning are central to current policy
concerns both in the UK and internationally. This book confirms
the significance of social capital as an analytical
tool, while challenging the basis on which current policy is being
developed. It:
• offers a wealth of evidence on a topic that has become central
to contemporary
government;
• provides a detailed empirical investigation of the relationship
between social capital, knowledge creation and lifelong learning;
• relates the findings to wider policy debates;
The book is aimed at researchers in education, policy studies and
urban studies, as well as those concerned with an understanding
of contemporary policy concerns.
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Posted June, 3, 2005 (thanks
to Eric Uslaner)
Sam Pizzigatti, Greed
and Good: Understanding and Overcomng the Inequality That Limits
Our Lives, New York, Apex Press, Council on International &
Public Affairs, 2005.
This extraordinary book begins with a detailed demolition of the
trickle-down case for inequality. Pizzigati, a labor economist,
also makes the case that vast accumulations of wealth neither create
effective incentives to work harder nor ensure that the appropriate
level of savings will be forthcoming. The author continues in the
second part by arguing that inequality encourages inefficiency and
has tremendous social costs. He compellingly asserts that a less
unequal society would benefit the very rich as well as the poor.
The final section begins with a historical analysis of the debates
over inequality in the US from the early days of the republic to
the present. The book ends with a short discussion about the possibility
of creating a more equitable society. No brief description can adequately
describe the mass of valuable insight and information contained
within this volume. The footnotes alone run more than 80 pages.
References come from the popular press as well as professional journals.
Pizzigati tells his story well and on a level easily accessible
to undergraduates, while still providing material that advanced
researchers will find valuable. This book deserves the highest possible
recommendation. Summing Up: Essential. Public, academic, and professional
library collections.
(from a review in the March 2005 issue of the American Library Association
journal, Choice, by economist Michael Perelman).
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Posted
May, 2, 2005 (thanks to Gert Svendsen)
Gunnar Lind Haase Svendsen and Gert Tinggaard
Svendsen, The
Creation and Destruction of Social Capital. Entrepreneurship, Co-operative
Movements and Institutions, will be published in September 2005
by Edward Elgar.
Is social capital the ‘missing link’ in economics? In
this vital new book, the authors argue that the ‘forgotten’
production factor of social capital is as crucial in economic decision-making
as the other more traditional factors of production such as physical,
financial and human capital.They attempt to bridge the gap between
theory and reality by examining the main factors that determine
entrepreneurship, co-operative movements and the creation and destruction
of social capital (from the publisher's flyer).
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