Livable Neighborhoods Project

Support for neighborhoods to become thriving, self-reliant communities

Archive for March, 2008

A sample flier to inspire people to start a community gathering

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

The Community Gathering

An effective, fun way for neighbors and friends to come together to create thriving, self-reliant communities.

The biggest problem with trying to make positive change is getting people involved. The combined aspects of the Community Gathering dissolves the obstacles to participation;, stamps out hopelessness and apathy; gets people excited; and empowers people to work together for a free, just society.

The Community Gathering combines fun, food, music, conversations and child care with a special way of having a town meeting called Open Space Technology which makes it easy for everyone attending to:

*Build friendships

*Share knowledge

*Strengthen neighborhoods and communities

*Effect positive change

*Be engaged in the job of “civilization building”

Some of the many things that will happen at a Community Gathering include:

*Meetups, Time Banking co-ops, and other already existing groups can use this as their meeting space.

*A diverse group of people will have a chance to network and cooperate, building trust and connection

*A shared vision and strategy for getting neighbors’ needs met will unfold

*People are empowered to get support to follow through with their passionate goals including things like starting a community garden, getting a neighborhood emergency plan together, elect accountable political candidates, taking care of their family, getting meaningful work, feeding the hungry, and caring for the environment

*Creating communication networks and connections outside the weekly gathering

*Classes of all kinds including reading, art, languages, communication, and grassroots activism

*Fun activities including dance, music, art and games

*On going work groups to help get projects going and enlist help.

Do you want to make a huge difference in your neighborhood and world? Help create an environment where people can effectively address things that matter most to them. Start a Community Gathering in your neighborhood!

 

For more information, contact Patricia Mikkelson livablefutureproject@gmail.com

Learn more and view a slide show here or at www.myspace.com/communitygathering

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Examples of things that can happen at Community Gatherings

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

 

Here are some examples of things that can happen at a Community Gathering

 

173 WAYS TO BUILD SOCIAL CAPITAL

 

The first 144 ideas were from
The Saguaro Seminar: Civic Engagement in America

 

Definition of Social Capital, by Robert Putnam, Author of BOWLING ALONE and BETTER TOGETHER

 “The central premise of social capital is that social networks have value. Social capital refers to the collective value of all “social networks” [who people know] and the inclinations that arise from these networks to do things for each other (norms of reciprocity)

Social capital is built through hundreds of little and big actions we take every day. We’ve gotten you started with a list of nearly 150 ideas, drawn from suggestions made by many people and groups. Try some of these or try your own. We need to grow this list. If you have other ideas, email us.

I, Patricia Mikkelson, conceptualizer of the Community Gathering, have put stars at the end of each activity to show how the Community Gathering can make these things more possible. When people show up at a weekly Community Gathering,knowing there is a free meal, childcare,  transportation, and meaningful/fun activities for the whole family– then they are going to be much more likely to be involved with all of these projects.

*means that an announcement can be made, flyers handed out, this can be listed on a newsletter, and a bulletin board, or you can just talk to a few people about getting involved, or the idea can be introduced somehow.

** means that this event can easily be organized at the gathering

***means that this activity can actually take place at the community gathering

1.      Organize a social gathering to welcome a new neighbor***
2. Attend town meetings***
3. Register to vote and vote***
4. Support local merchants**
5. Volunteer your special skills to an organization***
6. Donate blood (with a friend!)*
7. Start a community garden**
8. Mentor someone of a different ethnic or religious group***
9. Surprise a new neighbor by making a favorite dinner–and include the recipe*
10. Tape record your parents’ earliest recollections and share them with your children***
11. Plan a vacation with friends or family***
12. Avoid gossip***
13. Help fix someone’s flat tire*
14. Organize or participate in a sports league**
15. Join a gardening club***
16. Attend home parties when invited**
17. Become an organ donor or blood marrow donor.*
18. Attend your children’s athletic contests, plays and recitals*
19. Get to know your children’s teachers*
20. Join the local Elks, Kiwanis, or Knights of Columbus*
21. Get involved with Brownies or Cub/Boy/Girl Scouts***
22. Start a monthly tea group***
23. Speak at or host a monthly brown bag lunch series at your local library**
24. Sing in a choir***
25. Get to know the clerks and salespeople at your local stores***
26. Attend PTA meetings*
27. Audition for community theater or volunteer to usher**
28. Give your park a weatherproof chess/checkers board***
29. Play cards with friends or neighbors***
30. Give to your local food bank***
31. Walk or bike to support a cause and meet others**
32. Employers: encourage volunteer/community groups to hold meetings on your site*
33. Volunteer in your child’s classroom or chaperone a field trip*
34. Join or start a babysitting cooperative***
35. Attend school plays
36. Answer surveys when asked***
37. Businesses: invite local government officials to speak at your workplace*
38. Attend Memorial Day parades and express appreciation for others**
39. Form a local outdoor activity group

40. Participate in political campaigns***
41. Attend a local budget committee meeting*
42. Form a computer group for local senior citizens***
43. Help coach Little League or other youth sports – even if you don’t have a kid playing*
44. Help run the snack bar at the Little League field*
45. Form a tool lending library with neighbors and share ladders, snow blowers, etc.**
46. Start a lunch gathering or a discussion group with co-workers **
47. Offer to rake a neighbor’s yard or shovel his/her walk *
48. Start or join a carpool
**
49. Employers: give employees time (e.g., 3 days per year to work on civic projects)*
50. Plan a “Walking Tour” of a local historic area**
51. Eat breakfast at a local gathering spot on Saturdays**
52. Have family dinners and read to your children*
53. Run for public office**
54. Stop and make sure the person on the side of the highway is OK*

55. Host a block party or a holiday open house **
56. Start a fix-it group–friends willing to help each other clean, paint, garden, etc.***
57. Offer to serve on a town committee*
58. Join the volunteer fire department*
59. Go to church…or temple…or walk outside with your children–talk to them about why its important***
60. If you grow tomatoes, plant extra for an lonely elder neighbor – better yet, ask him/her to teach you and others how to can the extras*
61. Ask a single diner to share your table for lunch*
62. Stand at a major intersection holding a sign for your favorite candidate**
63. Persuade a local restaurant to have a designated “meet people” table**
64. Host a potluck supper before your Town Meeting***
65. Take dance lessons with a friend***
66. Say “thanks” to public servants – police, firefighters, town clerk…***
67. Fight to keep essential local services in the downtown area–your post office, police station, school, etc.***
68. Join a nonprofit board of directors*
69. Gather a group to clean up a local park or cemetery***
70. When somebody says “government stinks,” suggest they help fix it*
71. Turn off the TV and talk with friends or family***
72. Hold a neighborhood barbecue**
73. Bake cookies for new neighbors or work colleagues**
74. Plant tree seedlings along your street with neighbors and rotate care for them**

  75. Volunteer at the library*
76. Form or join a bowling team**
77. Return a lost wallet or appointment book*
78. Use public transportation and start talking with those you regularly see*
79. Ask neighbors for help and reciprocate**
80. Go to a local folk or crafts festival**
81. Call an old friend*
82. Sign up for a class and meet your classmates***
83. Accept or extend an invitation***
84. Talk to your kids or parents about their day***
85. Say hello to strangers***
86. Log off and go to the park**
87. Ask a new person to join a group for a dinner or an evening***
88. Host a pot luck meal or participate in them***
89. Volunteer to drive someone*
90. Say hello when you spot an acquaintance in a store*
91. Host a movie night***
92. Exercise together or take walks with friends or family***
93. Assist with or create your town or neighborhood’s newsletter***
94. Organize a neighborhood pick-up – with lawn games afterwards***
95. Collect oral histories from older town residents***
96. Join a book club discussion or get the group to discuss local issues***
97. Volunteer to deliver Meals-on-Wheels in your neighborhood*
98. Start a children’s story hour at your local library***
99. Be real. Be humble. Acknowledge others’ self-worth***
100. Tell friends and family about social capital and why it matters***
101. Greet people***
102. Cut back on television***
103. Join in to help carry something heavy***

104. Plan a reunion of family, friends, or those with whom you had a special connection***
105. Take in the programs at your local library*

106. Read the local news faithfully***
107. Buy a grill and invite others over for a meal**

108. Fix it even if you didn’t break it***
109. Pick it up even if you didn’t drop it***
110. Attend a public meeting***
111. Go with friends or colleagues to a ball game (and root, root, root for the home team!)**
112. Help scrape ice off a neighbor’s car, put chains on the tires or shovel it out*
113. Hire young people for odd jobs***
114. Start a tradition***
115. Share your snow blower*
116. Help jump-start someone’s car*
117. Join a project that includes people from all walks of life***
118. Sit on your stoop*
119. Be nice when you drive*
120. Make gifts of time***
121. Buy a big hot tub
122. Volunteer at your local neighborhood school
*
123. Offer to help out at your local recycling center**
124. Send a “thank you” letter to the Editor about a person or event that helped build community***
125. Raise funds for a new town clock or new town library***
126. When inspired, write personal notes to friends and neighbors***
127. Attend gallery openings*
128. Organize a town-wide yard sale***
129. Invite friends or colleagues to help with a home renovation or home building project**
130. Join or start a local mall-walking group and have coffee together afterwards**
131. Build a neighborhood playground**

132. Become a story-reader or baby-rocker at a local childcare center or neighborhood pre-school***
133. Contra dance or two-step***
134. Help kids on your street construct a lemonade stand***
135. Open the door for someone who has his or her hands full***
136. Say hi to those in elevators*
137. Invite friends to go snowshoeing, hiking, or cross-country skiing***
138. Offer to watch your neighbor’s home or apartment while they are away*
139. Organize a fitness/health group with your friends or co-workers***
140. Hang out at the town dump and chat with your neighbors as you sort your trash at the Recycling Center*
141. Take pottery classes with your children or parent(s)*
142. See if your neighbor needs anything when you run to the store*
143. Ask to see a friend’s family photos***
144. Join groups (e.g., arts, sports, religion) likely to lead to making new friends of different race or ethnicity, different social class or bridging across other dimensions ***

 

The following are suggestions I, Patricia, have made:

146. Start a success team and encourage each other in following your dreams***

147.    Facilitate a music jam session and encourage people of all ages and stages of talent to participate***

148.    Start a free geeks group and make it easy for people of all incomes to get computers**

149.    Start a life-long learning center and have classes for all ages in every conceivable subject***

150.    Have a dance jam where people bring their favorite music to dance to***

151.    Make an effort to include in all activities people who are under served and underheard***

152.    Teach a class in Non-violent communication or some other effective communication technique, and encourage people to start speaking in ways that build bridges of compassion***

153.    Start a listening buddies network so that every single person in your neighborhood has  number of people who can listen empathically to them in times of trouble.***

154.    Organize a neighborhood-wide emergency preparedness plan using something like 3 steps to neighborhood Preparedness***

155.    Start a neighborhoodlink or some similar website to connect neighbors***

156.    Raise funds to help bring in a consultant who can facilitate a three day meeting to help the neighborhood create a shared vision using effective change making facilitation techniques such as Future Search or Open Space Technology***

157.    Start a group to help localize the economy***

158.    Organize a networking group of local business people***

159.    Organize a food drive***

160.    Help single parents with childcare***

161.    Sponsor a 12 step group or other support group for addictions***

162.    Start a mentoring/coaching network***

163.    Have study groups to learn about different religions and foster a spirit of tolerance and understanding***

164.    Bring people of all ages and background together for a sing along***

165.    Organize a talent show where people of all levels of skill are encouraged to share their gifts***

166.    Host a local mic having poetry,music, prose, comedy and drama, encouraging people of all levels of talent to participate***

167.    Host conversation cafes and discuss a wide variety of topics relating to civic engagement

168.    Host study circles and learn more about the important issues that effect us all

169.    Learn more about the importance of civic engagement***

170.    Have book studies on such books as Bowling Alone, Better Together,

171.     Make a list of all the books which relate to building social capital and build a library accessible to all

172.    Inspire people to pay a fee like ten dollars a month to pay a natural connector in the community to do that full time.

173.     I have about 200 more ideas—no time now! (Patricia)

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Powerful video: Why we need churches involved in neighborhoods

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

http://connectingthechurch.wordpress.com/2006/04/03/the-church-is-everywhere-part-2/

Posted in Church Involvement, Inspiration, spiritual support | No Comments »

Human needs: can community gatherings help meet those needs?

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

What if our community gatherings could be designed to meet all human needs at one time? Would that be amazing or what? Manfred Max-Neef has done extensive research and listed what he perceives is our basic human needs on the chart below. I will be looking at these needs as I continue to design the Communty Gathering. See the link after the chart to learn more about Max-Neef.

Fundamental
Human Needs

Being
(qualities)

Having
(things)

Doing
(actions)

Interacting
(settings)

subsistence

physical and
mental health

food, shelter
work

feed, clothe,
rest, work

living environment,
social setting

protection

care,
adaptability
autonomy

social security,
health systems,
work

co-operate,
plan, take care
of, help

social environment,
dwelling

affection

respect, sense
of humour,
generosity,
sensuality

friendships,
family,
relationships
with nature

share, take care of,
make love, express
emotions

privacy,
intimate spaces
of togetherness

understanding

critical
capacity,
curiosity, intuition

literature,
teachers, policies
educational

analyse, study,meditate
investigate,

schools, families
universities,
communities,

participation

receptiveness,
dedication,
sense of humour

responsibilities,
duties, work,
rights

cooperate,
dissent, express
opinions

associations,
parties, churches,
neighbourhoods

leisure

imagination,
tranquillity
spontaneity

games, parties,
peace of mind

day-dream,
remember,
relax, have fun

landscapes,
intimate spaces,
places to be alone

creation

imagination,
boldness,
inventiveness,
curiosity

abilities, skills,
work,
techniques

invent, build,
design, work,
compose,
interpret

spaces for
expression,
workshops,
audiences

identity

sense of
belonging, self-
esteem,
consistency

language,
religions, work,
customs,
values, norms

get to know
oneself, grow,
commit oneself

places one
belongs to,
everyday
settings

freedom

autonomy,
passion, self-esteem,
open-mindedness

equal rights

dissent, choose,
run risks, develop
awareness

anywhere

You can learn more about

MANFRED NEEF in this very interesting article

http://www.rainforestinfo.org.au/background/maxneef.htm

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Community Organizer Training: a program anyone can use

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

A detailed description of  a neighborhood facilitator, or services coordinator. We can use these ideas to develop a community organizer training program as well as enrich the community gathering concept

http://www.mincava.umn.edu/documents/drugres/drugres.html

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Research about Social Capital and what helps or discourages cooperation

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

Interesting Research on Social Capital or Related Topics

Interesting books:

For a discussion of mathematical and game-theory attempts to understand why we cooperate and trust one-another see: Robert Axelrod. The Evolution of Cooperation. (Basic Books, 1985).

Dan Kahan has an interesting forthcoming book called The Logic of Reciprocity: A Theory of Collective Action and Law. An abstract and copy of summary article is available here for download. The article describes the intersection of trust, collective action and policy and describes some interesting experiments where approaches like social cueing (e.g., letting people know how law-abiding others were) were more effective in increasing collective action (in this case tax compliance) than increasing penalties or enforcement. Also has an interesting discussion of the dynamics of collective action, which tends to have multiple equilibria: behavior is most unstable when some are cooperating and others are free-riding and most stable when virtually all are cooperating or none are.

Yochai Benkler, “Sharing Nicely: On Shareable Goods and the Emergence of Sharing as a Modality of Economic Production.” 114 Yale Law Journal 2 (November 2004) looking at the sharing of resources like carpooling or the search for extraterrestrial life (SETI) using millions of individuals’ home computers. A quite interesting article that addresses transaction costs, motivation and the implications for contemporary policy debates.

Michael Cornfield’s fascinating book, Politics Moves Online (2004) describes the potential impact of technology on politics and civics engagement.

Ron Burt has an important new book Brokerage and Closure (2005, Oxford Univ. Press). The book is a bit less accessible, but hints at how rudimentary changes in motivation and compensation can dynamically change the structure and growth of company networks, and the likelihood that factors like silos or distance can be overcome. The book also talks about the importance of brokers in trust and relationships. A pr’cis of this book is available here.

Here is a sprinkling of the research on social capital or its related kin.

Social capital generally
Workplace/Business/Economics
Faith-based
Technology
Altruism/volunteering/voluntary associations/National Service
Education/Youth
Government/Politics
Trust/Neuroeconomics
Medicine/Health
New Urbanism/mixed use housing/Architecture/Suburbs
Neighborhoods/Crime
The arts
The family/Friends
Happiness/Well-Being
Animal Studies on Cooperation
Diversity and Bridging Social Capital
Small Worlds/Social Networks
Dimensionalizing Social Capital
Other

Social capital generally

Review of Social Economy, Volume 65(1) (2007) put out by the Journal of the Association for Social Economics has a special issue on social capital called Beyond Social Capital: a Critical Approach

NEW: David Halpern recently wrote a quite interesting book Social Capital and has been a high level advisor to the British Government on their social capital efforts. On page 12 and 13 of this presentation, he has an interesting conceptualization of social capital into the “micro”, “meso” and “macro” level – basically the individual, community and societal levels. So for example, in the domain of the connection between social capital and economics, there would be micro interactions [e.g., the connection between the individual’s social capital and his/her earnings or employability], meso level interactions [e.g., the NY diamond trade not needing to check every diamond for purity because of underlying trust among the relevant firms], and macro level interactions [e.g., explaining economic differences between nations or regions based on levels of social capital]. Each different domain (like public health, community safety, economic prosperity) might have different pathways by which social capital was associated with these public goods.

NEW: Dora L. Costa & Matthew E. Kahn wrote a paper on some of the ‘highest stakes’ benefits of social capital: how social networks helped individuals survive POW camps, called “Surviving Andersonville: The Role of Friends in Confederate POW Camps” (2005)

NEW: Rupasinghaa, Anil, Stephan J. Goetzb and David Freshwater (2006). The production of social capital in US counties (Journal of Socio-Economics, 35(1): 83-101) attempts to discern what factors produce social capital at the county level using GSS and the Census County Business Patterns data.

Dora L. Costa & Matthew E. Kahn, 2001. “Understanding the Decline in Social Capital, 1952-1998″ NBER Working Papers 8295, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.

Workplace/Business/Economics

William Eastery, Jozef Ritzen and Michael Woolcock. (2006). “Social Cohesion, Institutions and Growth”. Economics & Politics
18 (2): 103, showing how growth is casually determined by social cohesion (income inequality and ethnic fractionalization), working through institutional quality. Working Paper available here.

Diana Mutz in Social Trust and E-Commerce: Experimental Evidence for the Effects of Social Trust on Individuals’ Economic Behavior [Public Opinion Quarterly, Fall 2005. 69(3): 393-416] analyzes how increased trust of others leads to greater willingness to engage in e-commerce.

Faith-based/Religion

NEW: Rajeev Dehlijia, Thomas DeLeire and Erzo Luttmer have a NBER paper (2005) called “Insuring Consumption and Happiness Through Religious Organizations” that shows how being involved with religion can provide social, consumption, or happiness buffers to severe losses in income. They found that religion had effects for whites and blacks but the effects worked differently: whites were able to get consumption insurance, while blacks were able to get more happiness insurance from religion than whites.

Jonathan Gruber, Is Religion Good for You? (NBER Working Paper, May 2005).

NEW: Mary Jo Bane has a paper examining The Catholic Puzzle: Parishes and Civic Life (2005). She explores datasets like our Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey to understand why Catholics don’t get involved more civicly when so much of their theology is about that.

Technology

On Harvard’s Complexity Blog, Ben Waber describes research in a German bank using the Sociometric Badge; the badge developed by the MIT Media Lab, is worn for extended periods of time and measures in real time the proxmity of badge wearers to other badge wearers. When coupled with e-mail logs, the data gathered showed that proximity and e-mail use were strongly negative related. Other findings included the fact that the volume of communication was negative related to its perceived quality. Waber’s paper is being presented at the 2007 NetSci conference.

Weinberg, Bruce & Williams, Christine (2006). The 2004 US Presidential campaign: Impact of hybrid off-line and on-line ‘meetup’ communities.Journal of direct, data and digital marketing practice. 8 (1), 46-57. They looked at 820 people who attended meetups for presidential candidates between January 22 and March 10, 2004, they found that meetup attendance was positively related to various imeasures of campaign effectiveness, such as donations, volunteering and candidate support and advocacy (encouraging others to learn about, work for or vote for the candidate). They concluded that “Meetup may be a useful vehicle for acquiring ‘attractive’ customers” and newcomers to campaigns. They classify Meetup as an e2f (electronic-to-face) community that couples the strengths of technology (stronger search, easier to readh strangers, etc.) wtih the strength of face-to-face ties in building trust.

Glenn Sparks and Hannah Kirk (Purdue) conducted experiments (12/06) to see TV’s effect on social interaction. Participants were asked to bring a friend to the sessions, and randomized which pairs were exposed to TV during their 10 minutes in the waiting room. Questionnaires of the participants revealed that people made twice the amount of eye contact with the TV off and their enjoyment of the time with their friend rose about 40% when the TV was off (from 67% to 94%). They have not yet explored how the content of the TV programs affects social interaction.

Thomas Sander, “E-Associations? Using Technology to Connect Citizens: the Case of Meetup.com” Paper for American Political Science Association (APSA) Annual Conference in Washington, DC, September 2005. Another version of this paper available as a Taubman Center Working Paper.

Vincent Price, Citizens Deliberating Online: Theory and Some Evidence (2006) from Online Deliberation: Design, Research, and Practice. Todd Davies and Beth Simone Noveck (eds.). Price has conducted two online experiments in discussion and deliberation: one in discussing politics during the 2000 campaign (in Liberal groups, Conservative groups and mixed groups) and one recently on healthcare policy (with segmented or mixed groups of experts, the Attentive Public, and random Americans). All conversations were text-only discussions with minimally intrusive moderators, but Price found that participation in such groups led to modest increases in social trust, civic engagement, political participation, and political efficacy. The discussions were frank but civil, and participants most valued hearing others’ perspectives. There was little evidence of serious polarization from these groups and “speaking” in the groups was relatively equitably distributed. And the people who were less politically knowledgeable and less technologically savvy liked participation the most.

Shanyan Zhao, Do Internet Users Have More Social Ties? A Call For Differentiated Analyses of Internet Use (Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 11(3), article 8) . [But article in our estimation makes the mistake of assuming that all friendships are equal, and that a friend made and sustained on-line in a chat room affords the same social capital benefits that one would get from a friendship sustained in the real, non-virtual world. Our strong hypothesis is that the real-world friend one would be much more likely to trust, would be much more likely to visit you if you were in the hospital, etc.]

The Strength of Internet Ties (Jeff Boase, Barry Wellman, 2006). The report shows how Americans use e-mail to supplement ties to others by phone or in-person rather than using the Internet to replace their other forms of social connection.

Keith Hampton, e-Neighbors: Neighborhoods in the Network Society. 2006. [Paper is under review, but an abstract can be found here.] A ‘flash’ presentation of Keith’s findings is available here.

Nancy Baym, Yan Bing Zhang, Mei-Chen Lin, Social Interactions Across Media. 2004. (New Media and Society, 6(3):299-318.

William Davies has an interesting booklet written in the U.K. about how technology can be used to enhance communication.

Yochai Benkler, “Coase’s Penguin, or Linux and the Nature of the Firm.”112 Yale Law Journal 3 (December 2002) on how and why people collaborate on e-based projects without the hope of financial reward, like Wikipedia (an online encyclopedia), Slashdot, Linux, etc. A few parts are rather technical and quantitative, but the article is quite interesting.

Paul Resnick has an interesting paper ‘Impersonal Sociotechnical Capital, ICTs, and Collective Action Among Strangers‘ (2004).

Some of the research on t-government (transformational government) has started to focus on the issue of co-production, like this article by Stephen King, Citizen Relationship Management: The Rocky Road from Transactions to Empowerment. Co-production, in which the citizens help craft governmental service or are co-producers in the results (like clients taking partial responsibility for improving their health) dates back to this 1980 article: Gordon Whitiker, Coproduction: Citizen Participation in Service Delivery (Public Administration Review).

Benjamin A. Olken’s NBER paper Do Television and Radio Destroy Social Capital? Evidence from Indonesian Villages uses quasi-experimental evidence (which Indonesian villages are blocked by mountains from receiving transmissions) to show that villages with greater TV access and watching are associated with lower levels of social capital. (2006)

Duncan Watts and colleagues have an experiment called the Small World experiment to try to replicate Stanley Millgram’s lost letter experiment that produced the ‘6 degrees of separation’ conclusion. In the experiment, volunteers try to find out in how few links through friends they can find others who are very distant worldwide (geographically and socially).

Networks, Netwars, and the Fight For The Future (First Monday, by David Ronfeldt and John Arequilla)

Altruism/volunteering/voluntary associations/national service

Arthur C. Brooks, “Does Social Capital Make You Generous?” Social Science Quarterly, vol. 86(1): 1-15 (March 2005) exploring the link between social capital and philanthropy using the Social Capital Community Survey Benchmark data.

Abt Associates has issued a longitudinal study on the impact of participation in AmeriCorps on educational and civic engagement outcomes. Study available here.

Harris Wofford’s Cracking The Atom of Civic Power (National Civic Review, Summer 2005) discusses the post WW-II history of national service and its importance to civic renewal.

NEW: Edward C. Metz and James Youniss, “Longitudinal Gains in Civic Development through School-Based Required Service” Political Psychology, vol. 26(3): p. 413 (June 2005) showing that while youth who have baseline inclination to do community service don’t benefit significantly from school-mandated service, those who lacking baseline inclination to serve show marked gains on 3 of 4 civic measures over time from serving.

Education/Youth

Hardwired to Connect, an interdisciplinary study that came out in 2003 shows the connection between lack of social capital among adolescents and a rise in teen depression and suicide.

Nathaniel Leland Schwartz, “Civic Disengagement: The Demise of the American High School Civics Class”
(Harvard senior thesis, 2002).

Government/Politics

Dave Campbell, Why We Vote: How Schools and Communities Shape Our Civic Life (Princeton University Press, 2005)

With all the increased focus on negative political advertising, does this suppress voter turnout by convincing all but the most diehard voters that they should just stay home since neither of the candidates are good. See for example:
Lau, Richard and Gerald Pomper “Effects of Negative Campaigning on Turnout in U.S. Senate Elections 1988-1998“, Journal of Politics, Vol. 63, No. 3 (Aug., 2001), pp. 804-819. They found that “campaign negativism has a curvilinear effect on turnout, with most observed levels of negativism actually stimulating turnout. Only at extremely high levels does negativism in political campaigns generally suppress turnout.”
Clinton, Joshua D. and John S. Lapinski. 2004. “‘Targeted’ Advertising and Voter Turnout: An Experimental Study of the 2000 Presidential Election“, Journal of Politics, Volume 66(1), page 69, finding that exposure to negative political advertising in an experiment generally increased turnout, although it depended at times on the ad’s message and sub-population demographics.
Don Green et al. 2003 “Partisan mail and voter turnout: results from randomized field experiments. ” Electoral Studies 22: 563–579. Green et al. conversely found that partisan campaign mail does little to stimulate voter turnout and may even dampen it when the mail is negative in tone.

Trust/Neuroeconomics

Robert Hurley, The Decision to Trust (Harvard Business Review, Sept. 2006) on the thought process that individuals use in deciding whom to trust.

Diana Mutz in Social Trust and E-Commerce: Experimental Evidence for the Effects of Social Trust on Individuals’ Economic Behavior [Public Opinion Quarterly, Fall 2005. 69(3): 393-416] analyzes how increased trust of others leads to greater willingness to engage in e-commerce.

There is a good lay overview of neuroeconomics in the New Yorker’s Mind Games (9/18/06 by John Casidy). Only some of the article discusses trust and the importance of oxytocin in this process.

NEW: The OECD Observer has an article about Trust in Government (Nov. 2005).

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine Human Neuroimaging Laboratory and California Institute of Technology explored which regions of the brain are associated with trust and mapped how the signal to trust comes earlier and earlier in transactions as the level of trust increases. News article here and article appeared in “Getting to Know You: Reputation and Trust in a Two-Person Economic Exchange”. Brooks King-Casas, Damon Tomlin, Cedric Anen, Colin F. Camerer, Steven R. Quartz, and P. Read Montague. Science 1 April 2005: 78-83.

The Journal Nature (6/2/05, p. 571) contains an article by Antonio Damasio called “Human behaviour: Brain trust” discussing a series of clever experiments that examine the neurochemistry of trust and the underlying research “Oxytocin Increases Trust in Humans” by Michael Kosfel, Markus Heinrichs, Paul Zak, and Ernst Fehr is in the same issue of Nature (6/2/05, pp. 673-676). The research shows how oxytocin increases the willingness of experimental subjects to engage in ‘approaching behavior’ (offering trust in interpersonal situations) but doesn’t increase a willingness to reciprocate trust nor a general euphoria or optimism. Paul Zak also sketches out the Neuroeconomics of Trust in this paper (2005).

Hakan Holm and Anders Danielson have done some empirical work trying to understand the interconnection between trust, reciprocity, generosity and social trust among Swedish and Tanzanian economics students. The interesting study can be found in Tropic Trust Versus Nordic Trust: Experimental Evidence from Tanzania and Sweden [The Economic Journal, 115 (April 2005), 505-532].

Paul Zak has an article here on the importance of trust for country wealth and why it merits governmental investment.

Nava Ashraf, Iris Bohnet and Nikita Piankov wrote an article called Is Trust a Bad Investment on the motivations for trusting and what types of individuals expected engaging in trustworthy behavior to pay for itself.

Timothy E. Cook and Paul Gronke, “The Skeptical American: Revisiting the Meanings of Trust in Government and Confidence in Institutions” (March 2004).

Martin Nowak, Karen Page and Karl Sigmund, “Fairness versus reason in the ultimatum game” Science, Vol 289, 1773-1775, 8 Sept 2000.
see also: http://www.iiasa.ac.at/Publications/Documents/IR-00-057.pdf

Undermining any claim that trust or identification of cheating is a function of culture or levels of economic development, this study by Sugiyama, Tooby & Cosmides [“Cross-Cultural Evidence of Cognitive Adaptations for Social Exchange Among the Shiwiar of Ecuadorian Amazonia”] found ability to detect cheating both in the Shiwiar, an isolated Amazonian tribe of hunter-horticulturalists, and Harvard undergraduates.

Cross-cultural evidence across 15 societies shows that individuals do not behave in classic self-interested way predicted by homo economicus. “In Search of Homo Economicus: Behavioral Experiments in 15 Simple Societies,” American Economic Review, 91, 2 (May, 2001) 73-78 with R. Boyd, C. Camerer, E. Fehr, H. Gintis, J Henrich, and R. McElreath.

Medicine/Health

Nicholas Christakis (with James Fowler) has very interesting unpublished research on the social transmission of obesity and smoking; the data comes from a coding of family and friendship ties in the Framingham Heart Study (the landmark longitudinal study since the late 1950s that has been used to detect major causes of heart disease in America). They find, as one would expect if the transmission was social, that obesity spreads over a 4 year period between waves of the FHS study from a person (call her X) to those who said X was their friend (controlling for lots of background characteristics) but doesn’t spread from X to another person (Y) if Y didn’t indicate that X was his/her friend. Being further away socially from another (more degrees of separation) reduces the spread of obesity but being further away geographically does not. The transmission of smoking works in much the same way. And their evidence is that the friendships transmit the norms (e.g., it’s okay to be overweight) not the specific practices or behaviors (like exercising less, drinking alcohol, etc.) They also find that discordance in obesity results in increasing severance of friendships: i.e., if you are thin and your friend is fat (or vice versa), this social tie is less likely to persist over time than if your friend has a similar body mass index to yours. They plan in further research to use some genetic markers on FHS participants as instrument variables to control for any genetic predisposition to obesity. Christakis believes that many of our medical policy decisions underestimate benefits by failing to take into account the multiplier benefits on health spending (how treating person X can influence the people who have X as a friend, through social transmissions).

Sherman Folland, Does community social capital contribute to population health? (Social Science & Medicine, In Press, Corrected Proof, April 2007). Article suggests that any causal arrow runs more from social capital to health than the reverse. 2006 paper on this topic by Folland available here.

C. David Jenkins and Desmond K. Runyan (2005). “What’s Killing Americans In The Prime Of Life?” International Journal of Health Services, Vol. 35, Number 2, pp. 291 – 311. Lack of social capital offered as one explanation for why there is such a high mortality rate among Americans 15-59 years of age compared to other countries and adjusting for levels of health expenditures.

Lisa Berkman, Thomas Glass, Ian Brissette, and Teresa Seeman, “From Social Integration to Health: Durkheim in the New Millennium” Social Science and Medicine 51 (2000) 843-857 that speculates on the connection between social networks and health and also reviews literature on sociability of other animals and health.

Ichiro Kawachi, Bruce P Kennedy and R Glass (2005). “Social capital and self-rated health: a contextual analysis” American Journal of Public Health, Vol 89, Issue 8 1187-1193, finds low social capital lowers self-rated health in the GSS, controlling for income, health behaviors and other correlates.

Weitzman and Chen (2005) find that social capital reduces the likelihood of heavy alcohol consumption, alcohol abuse, and secondhand alcohol effects among college students. Journal Epidemiology & Community Health 2005;59:303-309. ["Risk modifying effect of social capital on measures of heavy alcohol consumption, alcohol abuse, harms, and secondhand effects: national survey findings"]

Some research has been done showing that sexually-transmitted diseases (STDs) spread less quickly in high social capital environments, and the impact of social capital was greater than the impact of poverty or income inequality. A description of this research can be found here and the fuller 2003 article is here by Holtgrave and Crosby ‘Social capital, poverty, and income inequality as predictors of gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia and AIDS case rates in the United States‘. Holtgrave et al. also found that social capital was a significant predictor of risky sexual behaviors, such as early sexual experience and having multiple partners. ‘Social Capital as a Predictor of Adolescents’ Sexual Risk Behavior: A State-Level Exploratory Study‘. AIDS and Behavior, September 2003, vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 245-252(8).

NEW: There is an interesting review of Social Capital and Psychiatry in the Harvard Review of Psychiatry (2005: 13:71-84) by Rob Whiteley and Kwame McKenzie. They conclude that the link between social capital and psychiatry is worthy of much more careful analysis, but find that there has not been convincing work done in this field to-date. [Note: They, like many scholars in the field of public health, strangely the social capital to community level effects, since the concept of 'social support' pre-existed the recent rise of social capital. Since social support was shown to be important to public health or psychiatry, they largely limit social capital to something new, even though in all other disciplines, social capital stands for the individual level network benefits AND the community level effects.]

New Urbanism/mixed use housing/Architecture/Suburbs

Thomas Sander, “Social Capital and New Urbanism: Leading a Civic Horse to Water?” National Civic Review. Fall 2002. Vol. 91, Issue 3, pp. 213-234.

Thad Williamson, Sprawl, Politics and Participation: A Preliminary Analysis. National Civic Review. Fall 2002. Vol. 91, Issue 3, pp. 235-244. [Thad has done some additional work to this initial article but not in a form that is publicly available yet.]

Ann Forsyth, “Irvine, Columbia, and the Woodlands: Planning Lessons From Three Towns in the 1960s and 1970s.” 2002. Journal of the American Planning Association, 68(4): 387-415. Now a book called Reforming Suburbia: The Planned Communities of Irvine, Columbia, and The Woodlands (University of California Press, 2005).

Social Interaction and Urban Sprawl. 2006. Jan K. Brueckner (UC Irvine) and Ann Largey (Dublin City University Business School) that purports to show using Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey data from 2000 that “good fences make good neighbors”. News article summary here. As Thad Williamson’s research shows (earlier paper on this topic in National Civic Review), it makes a big difference to one’s findings what variables you use in Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey to proxy for suburbs (for example, population density, average commuting time, average age of housing stock, etc.).

Neighborhoods/Crime

Neal Kumar Katyal, “Architecture as Crime Control”, 111 Yale Law Journal 5 (March 2002)
abstract at: www.yale.edu/yalelj/111/111-5ab.html

Susan Saegert, Gary Winkel, and Charles Swartz, “Social Capital and Crime in New York City’s Low-Income Housing” (Housing Policy Debate, Volume 13, Issue 1) describing how social capital helps lower crime.

***The Annie Casey Foundation has a report highlighting the Role of Social Capital in Building Healthy Communities, focusing on marginalized neighborhoods (2004).

The arts

***The National Endowment for the Arts, in their report The Arts and Civic Engagement: Involved in Arts, Involved in Life (2006) found that people engaged in the arts were more likely to participate in civic or social activities, including volunteering. The report uses data from the 2002 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, and while the report doesn’t say so, NEA found similar differences regardless of the gender or educational level of the respondents. NEA’s next Survey of Public Participation in the Arts is likely to be in 2008.

The family/friends

***Two prominent sociologists, Lynn Smith-Lovin and Miller McPherson, and former critics of Bowling Alone found confirming evidence of social isolation in the General Social Survey data. From 1985-2004, the percentage of Americans lacking anyone to discuss important matters with has nearly tripled. Almost half the U.S. population now has either no one or only one confidante with whom to discuss important matters. See June 2006 Social Isolation in America: Changes in Core Discussion Networks over Two Decades, American Sociological Review 71(3): 353-375.).

Bruce Sacerdote and David Marmaros have an interesting paper “How Do Friendships Form?” (NBER Working Paper No. 11530, August 2005) that shows clustering by race and social class among college students (inferring friendships based on e-mail patterns among Dartmouth students and alumni). They found that within-building geographic proximity and race are greater determinants of social interaction than common interests, majors, or family background. “Two randomly chosen white students interact three times more often than do a black student and a white student.” However, mixed race freshman dorms increased cross-race socializing threefold but didn’t increase cross-race socializing more generally. David Brooks had a column on this called “Barriers, and Paths, to Integration” (Sept. 21, 2005, NYT).

Happiness/Well-Being

S. Barolini, E. Bilancini, and M. Pugno, Did the Decline in Social Capital Decrease American Happiness? A Relational Explanation of the Happiness Paradox (draft 6/5/07)

John Helliwell (2005). Well-Being, Social Capital and Public Policy: What’s New?

Tayyab Rashid in 2005 found that bridging social capital brings people greater happiness. Rashid, a U. Penn. psychologist, randomly assigned experimental subjects to bowl by themselves, with strangers or with friends and found that the former brings a greater increase in happiness. (Study blurbed in Psychology Today, January 2006).

Helliwell, J. (2001) “How’s Life? Combining individual and national variables to explain subjective well-being.” NBER Working Paper, No. w9065.

Putnam/Helliwell, “The Social Context of Wellbeing” in The Science of Wellbeing (eds. Huppert, F., Baylis, N. and B. Keverne, 2005 Oxford Univ. Press).

Animal Studies on Cooperation

Elephant empathy. A 2006 paper by Iain Douglas-Hamilton et al in Applied Animal Behaviour Science, suggests that elephants remember their dead. See: Behavioural reactions of elephants towards a dying and deceased matriarch.

***This Harvard Gazette article “Taking a look at how ant (and human) societies might grow” (9/29/05) reviews recent research of Edward O. Wilson on ants that suggests that the growth of ant colonies stems from their extraordinary eusocial skills that orient ants to doing acts of cooperation in furtherance of the collective goal. That humans along with ants are one of only 15 species believed to have high levels of eusociality and the fact that humans have also grown quickly may well not be a coincidence.

A very interesting study among baboons by Jeanne Altmann (Princeton), Joan Silk (UCLA) and Susan Alberts (Duke) [published in Science 11/14/03 302:1231-4] showed how sociability in female baboons led to increased survival rates of baboon offspring. This suggests that we may have evolved to be social creatures and built social capital as adaptive evolution to ensure the survival of our genes and our offspring. [A summary of some of the findings can be found by clicking here.] A paper by Joan Silk on the Evolution of Cooperation in Primate Groups (2005) is available.

Earlier research by Sarah Brosnan (Emory) released over the summer of 2003 showed that an innate sense of fairness operates in female Capuchin monkeys. [The piece in Nature is available here, and a summary of the piece in the National Geographic is available by clicking here. Fair and Square (in the Economist, 9/18/03) also covers this topic.]

Click here for a summary piece talking about other work by biologists that show the evolutionary nature of sociability and cooperation.

Diversity/Bridging Social Capital

[for a larger selection of articles on diversity and social capital, click here.]

Dora L. Costa & Matthew E. Kahn, 2001. “Cowards and Heroes: Group Loyalty in the American Civil War,” NBER Working Papers 8627, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.

NEW: Xavier de Souza Briggs has been doing interesting work on bridging and bonding social capital, such as a PowerPoint presentation from 2001, although this presentation doesn’t focus on fact that the social capital bridgers are more likely than not to also be the social capital bonders and also does not control for opportunity for bridging (it’s much easier to form bridging social ties to blacks in Hispanics in San Antonio than in St. Louis). Xav Briggs has contributed an interested chapter on Social Capital and Segregation in the U.S. and a Conclusion about how to spur greater desegregation in Desegregating the City: Ghettos, Enclaves, and Inequality (ed. David Varady, Albany, SUNY Press, 2005.)

***One of the best things written about principles for building bridging social capital can be found in the Concord Handbook, written by Barbara Nelson, Linda Kaboolian, and Kathryn Carver (2003).

***Small Worlds/Social Networks

Brian Uzzi, Jarrett Spiro, RB Murmann, M Bothner, M Zelek, F et al. (2005) Collaboration and Creativity: The Small World Problem. American Journal of Sociology. Describes how social ties in small worlds can lead to initial high gains in creativity but with longer-term ceiling effects.

Dimensionalizing Social Capital

Yaojun Li, Andrew Pickles and Mike Savage. “Social Capital and Social Trust in Britain” In a methodologically sophisticated article, the authors examine which types of social capital are most important for various socio-economic groups in Britain and which types of social capital best predict future social trust (controlling for earlier levels of social trust and forms of social capital participation). [European Sociological Review 21(2) April 2005, pp. 109-23.]

Fabio Sabatini, Social Capital as Social Networks: A New Framework for Measurement (2005) [Working Paper]

Vella, Venanzio and Deepa Narayan, Building indices of social capital and its outcomes(Electronic Journal of Sociology, 2006)

Social Capital in the Field: Researchers’ Tales by the London Families & Social Capital ESRC Research Group highlights how social capital (or certain dimensions of social capital) were critical to various research projects on families.

See Social Capital Generally section for reference to David Halpern’s Social Capital book that talks about micro, macro and mezzo level social capital.

Other

Helliwell, J. (1996) Do Borders Matter for Social Capital? Economic Growth and Civic Culture in U.S. States and Canadian Provinces that discusses how geographic boundaries continue to shape social tie formation, even in a global environment, NBER Working Paper, No. w5863. See also “Maintaining Social Ties: Social Capital in a Global Information Age”(Helliwell, 2003).

The Social Capital Gateway has a section where it posts theses related to social capital and economic development.
You can also subscribe for free to the New Economics Papers on Social Norms and Social Capital.

 

 

 

 

****Social capital measurement overview

We believe that measurement of social capital is important for
3 reasons:
a) Measurement make the concept of social capital more tangiblet;
b) It increases our investment in social capital: in a performance-driven era, social capital will be relegated to second-tier status in the allocation of resources, unless organizations can show that their community-building efforts are showing results; and
c) Measurement helps funders and community organizations build more social capital. Everything that involves any human interaction can be asserted to create social capital, but the real question is does it build a significant amount of social capital, and if so, how much? Is a specific part of an organization’s effort worth continuing or should it be scrapped and revamped? Do mentoring programs, playgrounds, or sponsoring block parties lead more typically to greater social capital creation?

Robert Putnam describes the measurement of social capital in the beginning of this 2006 BBC report; the remaining first half of the broadcast discusses the U.K.’s social capital. We have been undertaking various applied activities in the realm of measurement:

1)2000 S

Social capital measurement overview

We believe that measurement of social capital is important for
3 reasons:
a) Measurement make the concept of social capital more tangiblet;
b) It increases our investment in social capital: in a performance-driven era, social capital will be relegated to second-tier status in the allocation of resources, unless organizations can show that their community-building efforts are showing results; and
c) Measurement helps funders and community organizations build more social capital. Everything that involves any human interaction can be asserted to create social capital, but the real question is does it build a significant amount of social capital, and if so, how much? Is a specific part of an organization’s effort worth continuing or should it be scrapped and revamped? Do mentoring programs, playgrounds, or sponsoring block parties lead more typically to greater social capital creation?

Robert Putnam describes the measurement of social capital in the beginning of this 2006 BBC report; the remaining first half of the broadcast discusses the U.K.’s social capital. We have been undertaking various applied activities in the realm of measurement:

1)2000 S

Posted in scientific research | No Comments »

Social Capital generated at community gatherings

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

I think the Community Gathering is an ideal place where people can be inspired and empowered to do things that are constructive in society. The Community Gathering makes it easier for people to be and do good. Here is a definition of social capital (author unknown–sorry about that–I lost track of where I got this)

What does “social capital” mean?
The central premise of social capital is that social networks have value. Social capital refers to the collective value of all “social networks” [who people know] and the inclinations that arise from these networks to do things for each other ["norms of reciprocity"].

How does social capital work?
The term social capital emphasizes not just warm and cuddly feelings, but a wide variety of quite specific benefits that flow from the trust, reciprocity, information, and cooperation associated with social networks. Social capital creates value for the people who are connected and - at least sometimes - for bystanders as well.

Social capital works through multiple channels:
Information flows (e.g. learning about jobs, learning about candidates running for office, exchanging ideas at college, etc.) depend on social capital norms of reciprocity (mutual aid) are dependent on social networks. Bonding networks that connect folks who are similar sustain particularized (in-group) reciprocity. Bridging networks that connect individuals who are diverse sustain generalized reciprocity. Collective action depends upon social networks (e.g., the role that the black church played in the civic rights movement) although collective action also can foster new networks. Broader identities and solidarity are encouraged by social networks that help translate an “I” mentality into a “we” mentality. What are some examples of social capital? When a group of neighbors informally keep an eye on one another’s homes, that’s social capital in action. When a tightly knit community of Hassidic Jews trade diamonds without having to test each gem for purity, that’s social capital in action. Barn-raising on the frontier was social capital in action, and so too are e-mail exchanges among members of a cancer support group. Social capital can be found in friendship networks, neighborhoods, churches, schools, bridge clubs, civic associations, and even bars. The motto in Cheers “where everybody knows your name” captures one important aspect of social capital.

For more information on social capital, read Chapter 1 of Bowling Alone or see the following.

Civic Practices Network (CPN) has a good description of social capital.

Briggs, Xavier de Souza. “Social Capital and the Cities: Advice to Change Agents.” National Civic Review 86, No. 2 (Summer 1997): 111-118.

Berry, Jeffrey M., Kent E. Portney, and Ken Thomson. The Rebirth of Urban Democracy. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1993.

Ehrenhalt, Alan. The Lost City: Discovering the Forgotten Virtues of Community in the Chicago of the 1950s. New York: BasicBooks, 1995.

Lemann, Nicholas “Kicking in Groups.” Atlantic Monthly (April 1996): 22-24.

Loury, Glenn “The Social Capital Deficit.” The New Democrat (May-June 1995): 28-29.

Loury, Glenn, “The Divided Society and the Democratic Ideal.” Boston University’s University Lecture, 1996.

Portes, Alejandro & Patricia Landolt, “The Downside of Social Capital.” The American Prospect 26 (May-June 1996): 18-21, 94. http://epn.org/prospect/26/26-cnt2.html

Potapchuk, William R., Jarle P. Crocker and William H. Schecter, Jr. “Building Community with Social Capital: Chits and Chums or Chats with Change.” National Civic Review 86, No. 2 (Summer 1997): 129-140.

Putnam, Robert D. Making Democracy Work. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1993.

Schambra, William and Michael S. Joyce. “A New Citizenship, A New Civic Life.” The Hudson Institute: 139-163.

Skocpol, Theda. “The Tocqueville Problem.” Address to Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association, New Orleans, October 12, 1996. [There is an adaptation of this available here.]

Vanourek, Gregg, Scott Hamilton, and Chester Finn. Is There Life After Big Government?: The Potential of Civil Society. The Hudson Institute.

Verba, Sidney, Kay Lehman Schlozman, and Henry E. Brady. Voice and Equality: Civic Voluntarism in American Politics. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995.

Walzer, Michael, “Civility and Civic Virtue in Contemporary America.” In Radical Principles: Reflections of an Unreconstructed Democrat. New York: Basic Books, 1980.

Walzer, Michael. “Idea of Civil Society.” Dissent (Spring 1991): 293-304.

Wilson, William Julius. When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor. New York: Knopf, 1996.

[for more in depth information on Social Capital visit www.ksg.harvard.edu/saguaro/]

 

Posted in Community Gathering, Inspiration, Uncategorized | No Comments »

Community Matters; Community Gatherings help create community

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

“Community matters. That’s about like saying oxygen matters. As our lungs require air, so our souls require what only community provides. Without it, we die. It’s that simple. Without a community where we know, explore, discover, and touch one another, we experience isolation and despair that drive us in wrong directions, that corrupt our efforts to live meaningfully and to love well.

The future of the church depends on whether it develops true community. We can get by for a while on size, skilled communication, and programs to meet every need, but unless we sense that we belong to each other, with masks off, the vibrant church of today will become the powerless church of tomorrow. Stale, irrelevant, a place of pretense where sufferers suffer alone, where pressure generates conformity rather than the Spirit creating life-that’s where the church is headed unless it focuses on community.” (author unknown)

The beauty of the Community Gathering is that not only does it help people in the church build community when they come together for connection and fellowship, a deeper bond is created when they know that they are serving others who also yearn for community.

The Community Gathering is the ultimate in efficiency for people who are overwhelmed in this busy world. By participating one evening a week, so many needs can be met–fellowship, service, fun, worship, Bible study, food, deepening friendships, and so much more. Whether you are a Christian, an athiest, a Buddhist or some other faith–I believe everyone needs community. Whether it is a church, a business, a community organization, or an individual who sponsors a Community Gathering, a sense of community can be created where everyone can get many, if not all, needs met.

Posted in Church Involvement, Community Gathering | No Comments »

Suggestions for Emergency Kits

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 26, 2008

This article gives lots of good ideas for various kits you can make yourself or purchase to be prepared for anything. I suggest that this could be a project that can be worked on at a community gathering so people can support each other in being prepared. Some things could be bought in bulk. Some people could print out the lists. People could check in each week to see how each other are doing, and have a brief discussion. Maybe someone knows where to get cheap stuff. I know that it is hard for me to think about anything but what is happening in front of me–hard to imagine something happening to me. Yet look at the weather and people experiencing floods and so many other natural disasters. I say prepare for the worst, but hope for the best.

http://www.outdoors-magazine.com/spip.php?page=article&id_article=103

Posted in Community Gathering, Emergency preparedness | No Comments »

A church in every neighborhood

Posted by patriciamikkelson on March 21, 2008

This short video is very powerful. It is a tragic snapshot of how many people feel isolated and lonely. The man in this story was found dead many years after he had died. No one had even noticed…that’s why we need A church in every neighborhood

Simple Church - Anytime, Anywhere, By Anyone

With the rising costs of gas, church buildings, real estate and staff salaries, the old ways of doing things no longer fit the practicalities of our changing culture.

The good news is today, you can now experience or create a Church experience with friends or neighbors without leaving your block or home. No buildings to build, offerings to take, no qualifications needed, anyone can do it and you can do it at anytime. Join us in this new awakening of the Church in America.

This video clip (courtesy of LifeChurch.tv) is an example of one of the tools we use in our neighborhood that can be downloaded free of charge to a DVD format for a full large screen quality video experience. You can even created your own complete video and book lending library for your neighborhood and community to use. We did it in our neighborhood and we can help you do the same in yours.

Check the front page for continual updates on tips, video’s, tools and

articles. Click here if you want more information or click the Neighborhood Initiative Project to find out more more about how we can bring transformation to the church and our communities.

Posted in Church Involvement | No Comments »