| Putnam,
Robert D., Better Together: Restoring the
American Community. New York: Simon &
Schuster, 2003.
Putnam's
much praised Bowling Alone put the concept of
social capital (social networking) into broad
currency by remarking on its growing absence.
Now the Harvard prof and fellow public policy
expert Feldstein approach the issue from the
opposite direction: without suggesting communitarianism
is sweeping the nation, they offer a dozen case
studies of what groups of varying size have
accomplished by cultivating networks of mutual
assistance. Examples range from a neighborhood
subdivision in Boston to an entire Mississippi
county as well as the "virtual community"
of Craigslist, an online bulletin board that
has become the prime "go-to" source
for job and apartment listings in San Francisco
and elsewhere. The authors stress the importance
of participatory involvement, championing networks
that create opportunities for people to find
their own public voice rather than relying on
organizers to speak for them.
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