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Putnam and Robert
Social capital is defined by Robert D. Putnam as " the collective value of all social networks and species ( who people know ) and the inclinations that arise from these works to do things for each other ( norms of reciprocity ).
* Blount, Roy, Jr. Robert E. Lee Penguin Putnam, 2003.
Soon, due to work of Robert Putnam, they started to treat Tocqueville as a main theoretician of civil society and their primary ancestor.
In the book Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam observed that nearly every form of civic organization has undergone drops in membership exemplified by the fact that, while more people are bowling than in the 1950s, there are fewer bowling leagues.
Other voices of communitarianism include Don Eberly, director of the Civil Society Project and Robert Putnam.
* Robert Putnam
* Robert Putnam, Communitarianism, National Public Radio, February 5, 2001: " The term ' Third Way ' was used to describe President Clinton's form of liberalism.
According to Robert D. Putnam, the " institutional performance " of Veneto's regional government is higher than average in Italy, thus Veneto belongs to the " civic North ".
In the late 1990s the concept gained popularity, serving as the focus of a World Bank research programme and the subject of several mainstream books, including Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone and Putnam and Lewis Feldstein's Better Together.
Robert Putnam has used the concept in a much more positive light: though he was at first careful to argue that social capital was a neutral term, stating “ whether or not shared are praiseworthy is, of course, entirely another matter ”, his work on American society tends to frame social capital as a producer of " civic engagement " and also a broad societal measure of communal health.
Robert D. Putnam, in his book Bowling Alone makes the argument that social capital is linked to the recent decline in American political participation.
According to Robert Putnam, social capital " refers to the collective value of all ' social networks ' and the inclinations that arise from these networks to do things for each other.
In his pioneering study, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community ( Simon & Schuster, 2000 ), Harvard political scientist Robert D. Putnam wrote: " Henry Ward Beecher's advice a century ago to ' multiply picnics ' is not entirely ridiculous today.
The biggest advocate for seeing social capital as a geographical subject was American economist and political scientist, Robert Putnam.
Social capital ( in the institutional Robert Putnam sense ) may also lead to bad outcomes if the political institution and democracy in a specific country is not strong enough and is therefore overpowered by the social capital groups.
* Putnam, Robert D. ( 2006 ).
Harvard professor of political science Robert D. Putnam conducted a nearly decade long study how multiculturalism affects social trust.
* Putnam, Robert D., "
The author Robert Putnam refers to the value which comes from social networks as social capital in his book “ Bowling Alone: The collapse and Revival of American Community .” He writes that social capital “ makes an enormous difference in our lives ”, that “ a society characterized by generalized reciprocity is more efficient that a distrustful society ” and that economic sociologists have shown a minimized economic wealth if social capital is lacking.
Robert Putnam reports, in the chapter Health and Happiness from his book Bowling Alone, that recent public research shows social connection impacts all areas of human health, this includes psychological and physical aspects of human health.
The other eighteen who were awarded this distinction were: Roy Chapman Andrews ; Robert Bartlett ; Frederick Russell Burnham ; George Kruck Cherrie ; James L. Clark ; Merian C. Cooper ; Lincoln Ellsworth ; Louis Agassiz Fuertes ; George Bird Grinnell ; Charles A. Lindbergh ; Donald Baxter MacMillan ; Clifford H. Pope ; George P. Putnam ; Kermit Roosevelt ; Carl Rungius ; Stewart Edward White ; Orville Wright. Byrd Memorial on Mount Victoria, Wellington, New ZealandAlso in 1927, the City of Richmond dedicated the Richard Evelyn Byrd Flying Field, now Richmond International Airport, in Henrico County, Virginia.
More recently, Robert D. Putnam has argued that even non-political organizations in civil society are vital for democracy.
* Robert D. Putnam
* Institutions: by investigating under what conditions agents manage to coordinate, or by modeling the works of Robert Putnam on civic traditions

Putnam and D
* Putnam, D. ( 1997 ).
* Puck by Brenda Putnam, marble, 1932, at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington D. C.
The primary law enforcement agency in most Windham County towns is the Connecticut State Police, primarily Troop D based in Danielson which serves Brooklyn, Canterbury, Chaplin, Eastford, Hampton, Killingly, Pomfret, Putnam ( outside the SSD ), Scotland, Sterling, Thompson, Woodstock and I-395 between exit 87 and the MA border.
In 1921, five local men purchased a wood barrel factory just south of the present D. W. Putnam Wine Company, and named it the Aerial Service Corporation.
* The Harmonious Circle: The Lives and Work of G. I. Gurdjieff, P. D. Ouspensky, and Their Followers by James Webb, 1980, Putnam Publishing.
** Argyris, C. Putnam, R. & Smith, D. 1985.
* May 13-Braniff International Airways ' president Howard D. Putnam announces the airline has filed for protection under bankruptcy laws, and the airline's fleet of 71 aircraft is grounded.
In 1966, he obtained the first Ph. D. in philosophy ever awarded by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, under the direction of Hilary Putnam.
Former chairs include John Boehner, Mike Pence, John B. Anderson, Richard B. Cheney, Jack Kemp, J. C. Watts, Jr. Deborah D. Pryce, and Adam Putnam.
Robert D. Putnam ( 2006 )
* Democracies in Flux: The Evolution of Social Capital in Contemporary Society ( Edited by Robert D. Putnam ), Oxford University Press, ( 2002 )
is a book by Robert D. Putnam.
* George D. Putnam ( born 1948 ), screenwriter
In 1935, Putnam was followed in the Commissioner's position by a career Lighthouse Service employee, H. D. King, a former district superintendent.
A statue of Forbes-Robertson by Brenda Putnam ( 1932 ) can be found at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington D. C ..

Putnam and .
New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher / Putnam, 1998.
* 1810 – John Putnam Chapin, American politician ( d. 1864 )
New York: Grosset / Putnam.
However, as Putnam notes in Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community ( 2000 ), social capital has been falling in the United States.
Putnam found that over the past 25 years, attendance at club meetings has fallen 58 percent, family dinners are down 33 percent, and having friends visit has fallen 45 percent.
Although Shelton's version is cherished by some, according to John Ormsby and Samuel Putnam, it was far from satisfactory as a carrying over of Cervantes's text.
Near the end of the 17th century, John Phillips, a nephew of poet John Milton, published what is considered by Putnam the worst English translated version.
What future translator Samuel Putnam called " the prevailing slapstick quality of this work, especially where Sancho Panza is involved, the obtrusion of the obscene where it is found in the original, and the slurring of difficulties through omissions or expanding upon the text " all made the Motteux version irresponsible.
The most widely read English-language translations of the mid-20th century are by Samuel Putnam ( 1949 ), J. M. Cohen ( 1950 ; Penguin Classics ), and Walter Starkie ( 1957 ).
In July 2008 she appeared on the Southern California radio show of longtime friend, newscaster George Putnam, reported in the Los Angeles Times.
Dartmouth alumni serving as CEOs or company presidents include Charles Alfred Pillsbury, founder of Pillsbury Company and patriarch of Pillsbury family, Sandy Alderson ( San Diego Padres ), John Donahoe ( eBay ), Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. ( IBM ), Charles E. Haldeman ( Putnam Investments ), Donald J.
New York: Penguin Putnam.
His mother, Maria Louisa Putnam Bellamy, was herself the daughter of a Baptist minister named Benjamin Putnam, a man forced to withdraw from the ministry in Salem, Massachusetts, following objections to him becoming a Freemason.
New York: Putnam, 1894.
Putnam & Sons.
Putnam ’ s Sons, ( 1915 ); Indy Publ.

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