Front cover image for Social structures, social capital, and personal freedom

Social structures, social capital, and personal freedom

The eleven essays in this collection examine the relationship between institutional structures and community integration, offering practical insights to increase social capital and strengthen social institutions.A variety of social institutions are analyzed.
Print Book, English, 2000
Praeger, Westport, Conn., 2000
xiv, 182 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780275964764, 0275964760
42021555
Introduction Driving Alone? Residential Mobility, Political Mobilization, and the Decline of Social Capital by Patrick Novotny Reconceiving Community: Pedaling and Peddling Democracy Among Japanese Housewives by Robin M. LeBlanc Points of Light: Building Social Capital? by Jeffrey L. Brudney Social Capital Can Be Costly: Voluntary Associations, Advocacy, and the State by Dennis R. Hoover Religion, Social Capital, and the Significance of Community by Dale McConkey The Promise Keepers as Social Capitalists and Architects of Civil Society by Bryan W. Brickner Communitarianism and Teacher Education by Wade A. Carpenter Academic Freedom for Religious Academics in Public Universities: The Case of Philip Bishop by Donald R. Wagner Moral Communities and Personal Freedoms: Protecting Academic Freedom in an Age of Accountability by Larry C. Ingram Communitarian Values and the Rise of Generals by James J. Dowd Community, Polity, and Economy: The Importance of Scale by Michael F. Patrono and J. Wilson Mixon, Jr