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- See also changes related to Social capital, or pages that link to Social capital or to this page or whose text contains "Social capital".
Parent topics
- Capital (economics) [r]: an asset that has been created for the purpose of production or an asset, such as human capital and social capital, that has been adapted to that purpose. [e]
- Civil society [r]: The space for social activity outside the market, state and household; the arena of uncoerced collective action around shared interests, purposes and values. [e]
- Economics [r]: The analysis of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. [e]
- Politics [r]: Activity that relates to the way in which society is governed, and the process by which human beings living in communities make decisions and establish obligatory values for its members. [e]
- Social science [r]: Any of a number of academic disciplines which study human social behavior, institutions and relations. [e]
Subtopics
- Social network [r]: An abstract or formal structure of serial social relations consisting of nodes (persons or roles) and links (the relations between nodes). [e]
- Saul Alinsky [r]: (1909-1972) A leftist community organizer probably best known for developing procedures for groups to work the political system to their benefit, written as Rules for Radicals [e]
- Aspen Institute [r]: A U.S.-based consensus-building and policy group [e]
- Benefit corporation [r]: For-profit corporation chartered with responsibilities of providing shareholder value, but also benefit to the society; a.k.a. B-Corp [e]
- Community organization [r]: A widely used term that can refer both to a type of civil society organization (one closely associated with a particular community) and to the process of forming, creating and operating such organizations. [e]
- Failed state [r]: A nation or quasi-nation unable to deliver minimal governance services to its citizens; there may not even be a functioning government [e]
- Henry Farrell [r]: Associate professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University; critic of political attacks on academic expression, of which he considers David Horowitz an exemplar; runs CrookedTimber blog and researches online communities' interactions with politics as well as the use of institutional theory in understanding social capital [e]
- Francis Fukuyama [r]: Professor at the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, author and government adviser on global development and foreign policy; in and out of neoconservatism; adjunct fellow, Hudson Institute; director, National Endowment for Democracy, New America Foundation [e]
- L.J. (Lyda Judson) Hanifan [r]: A West Virginia educational official and Superintendent of Rural Schools who is credited as the earliest (1916) user of the concept of social capital [e]
- Microcredit [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Insurgency [r]: A wide range of political and military actions intended to change a government, through means considered illegal by that government. [e]
- Emma Sky [r]: British cultural specialist, of a pacifist philosophy, who has become a political adviser and counselor to senior U.S. commanders in the Iraq War [e]
- Peace operations [r]: Operations other than all-out war, conducted by neutral parties, to ensure the continuance of a peace, or, in the face of resistance, to enforce it. [e]
- Robert Putnam [r]: Add brief definition or description
- The Social Capital Foundation [r]: A Brussels-based NGO promoting social capital and social cohesion. [e]
- Sojourners [r]: A U.S. Christian Left interest group, formed in 1971 from groups concerned about interactions of faith and the Vietnam War [e]
- Weak state [r]: A nation whose government or institutions are unable, or unwilling, to provide a significant set of essential public services, including just and legitimate government, physical security, food and health, and minimal economic development; contrast with failed state, which provides essentially none [e]
- James Q. Wilson [r]: Add brief definition or description
- World Bank [r]: Add brief definition or description
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