Petris social capital index
Social capital index and subindex scores for commuting zones, metropolitan areas, and micropolitan areas. Read the Report. View the Maps. Click a state or county for detailed rankings, zoom in and out of the map, and click and drag to explore. State-Level Maps. Make a selection: Social capital includes the social ties and reciprocity that surround a person. As such, social capital is an important aspect of quality of life. As the Personal Outcome Measures® recognizes health and safety depend on strong social ties. The social capital index shows that there have been stable trends since 2013, but a slight reduction (-5%) between 2017 and 2018 surveys. (Scottish Household Survey, 2018). How is social capital distributed across social groups and geographies, and what groups and places have lower levels of social capital? Here you will find data on the estimated stock of social capital in each US county for the years 1990, 1997, 2005, 2009, and 2014. PLEASE NOTE: The data are presented "as is" without any implied guarantees for accuracy, and that there are slight differences between 1990/1997 and 2005 as a result of the switch from the SIC to the NAICS codes. Social Capital Variables for 2014 The aim of this project, which was funded by the European Commission (DGEMPL), has been three-fold: i) to assess how the notion of “social capital” has been conceptualised in the research literature; ii) to detail how it has been measured in national and international surveys; and iii) to identify priority areas for statistical development. social capital as well as to invest in it directly. These are the objectives of the Social Capital Initiative (SCI). With the help of a generous grant of the Government of Denmark, the Initiative has funded a set of twelve projects which will help define and measure social capital
Here you will find data on the estimated stock of social capital in each US county for the years 1990, 1997, 2005, 2009, and 2014. PLEASE NOTE: The data are
Social capital includes the social ties and reciprocity that surround a person. As such, social capital is an important aspect of quality of life. As the Personal Outcome Measures® recognizes health and safety depend on strong social ties. The social capital index shows that there have been stable trends since 2013, but a slight reduction (-5%) between 2017 and 2018 surveys. (Scottish Household Survey, 2018). How is social capital distributed across social groups and geographies, and what groups and places have lower levels of social capital? Here you will find data on the estimated stock of social capital in each US county for the years 1990, 1997, 2005, 2009, and 2014. PLEASE NOTE: The data are presented "as is" without any implied guarantees for accuracy, and that there are slight differences between 1990/1997 and 2005 as a result of the switch from the SIC to the NAICS codes. Social Capital Variables for 2014 The aim of this project, which was funded by the European Commission (DGEMPL), has been three-fold: i) to assess how the notion of “social capital” has been conceptualised in the research literature; ii) to detail how it has been measured in national and international surveys; and iii) to identify priority areas for statistical development. social capital as well as to invest in it directly. These are the objectives of the Social Capital Initiative (SCI). With the help of a generous grant of the Government of Denmark, the Initiative has funded a set of twelve projects which will help define and measure social capital social capital, we need to think about the multiple dimensions of social capital. High on the research priority list in the area of social capital, as far as I am concerned, is developing the theoretically coherent and empirically valid typologies or dimensions along which social capital should vary. I will give some examples of how social capital
We use a validated measure of social capital, the Petris Social Capital Index ( PSCI), which measures structural social capital. We estimate a two-level multilevel
Measures of social capital at the U.S. state level included aggregate indices based on the Annenberg National Health Communication Survey (ANHCS) and the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), Petris Social Capital Index (PSCI), Putnam’s index, and Kim et al.’s scales. Approaches to the measurement of social capital include the Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey (SCCBS) developed by Robert Putnam, and the Petris Social Capital Index (PSCI), which looks at community voluntary organizations using public data available for the entire United States. Social capital index and subindex scores for commuting zones, metropolitan areas, and micropolitan areas. Read the Report. View the Maps. Click a state or county for detailed rankings, zoom in and out of the map, and click and drag to explore. State-Level Maps. Make a selection: Social capital includes the social ties and reciprocity that surround a person. As such, social capital is an important aspect of quality of life. As the Personal Outcome Measures® recognizes health and safety depend on strong social ties. The social capital index shows that there have been stable trends since 2013, but a slight reduction (-5%) between 2017 and 2018 surveys. (Scottish Household Survey, 2018). How is social capital distributed across social groups and geographies, and what groups and places have lower levels of social capital? Here you will find data on the estimated stock of social capital in each US county for the years 1990, 1997, 2005, 2009, and 2014. PLEASE NOTE: The data are presented "as is" without any implied guarantees for accuracy, and that there are slight differences between 1990/1997 and 2005 as a result of the switch from the SIC to the NAICS codes. Social Capital Variables for 2014 The aim of this project, which was funded by the European Commission (DGEMPL), has been three-fold: i) to assess how the notion of “social capital” has been conceptualised in the research literature; ii) to detail how it has been measured in national and international surveys; and iii) to identify priority areas for statistical development.
social capital as well as to invest in it directly. These are the objectives of the Social Capital Initiative (SCI). With the help of a generous grant of the Government of Denmark, the Initiative has funded a set of twelve projects which will help define and measure social capital
social capital, we need to think about the multiple dimensions of social capital. High on the research priority list in the area of social capital, as far as I am concerned, is developing the theoretically coherent and empirically valid typologies or dimensions along which social capital should vary. I will give some examples of how social capital Our social capital index is more strongly correlated with all three of our employment benchmarks than is the Penn State index and with all five of our income and poverty benchmarks. For five of the eight, the correlation with our index is greater than 0.5 (or less than -0.5). We define an index of social capital using game-theoretical concepts. We assume that interests of individuals are presented by means of a cooperative game which take into account possible Social capital in the devolved administrations. The UK’s devolved administrations also collect and publish data on social capital. Scotland’s social capital index is a national indicator that forms part of Scotland’s National Performance Framework. It monitors aggregate changes in levels of social capital since 2013 through the four Three broad approaches to measuring social capital are apparent across the literature, with preferences for particular approaches reflecting people’s position on some of the debates above. In his early work in the US, Putnam created a single ‘social capital index’ for each US state, comprising numerous variables from the General Social
Social capital is the effective functioning of social groups through interpersonal relationships, a shared sense of identity, a shared understanding, shared norms, shared values, trust, cooperation, and reciprocity.Social capital is a measure of the value of resources, both tangible (public spaces, private property) and intangible ("actors", "human capital", people), and the impact that these
The Institute has partnered with the Toronto Foundation and other leading civic organizations on a new research initiative to map the level of social trust and community engagement among Toronto residents, and provide a foundation for strengthening the social capital of the city. #23 The Nexus between Violent Conflict, Social Capital and Social Cohesion: Case Studies from Cambodia and Rwanda (by Nat J. Colletta and Michelle L. Cullen) #24 Understanding and Measuring Social Capital: A Synthesis of Findings and Recommendation from the Social Capital Initiative (by Christiaan Grootaert and Thierry van Bastelaer) social capital, we need to think about the multiple dimensions of social capital. High on the research priority list in the area of social capital, as far as I am concerned, is developing the theoretically coherent and empirically valid typologies or dimensions along which social capital should vary. I will give some examples of how social capital
The aim of this project, which was funded by the European Commission (DGEMPL), has been three-fold: i) to assess how the notion of “social capital” has been conceptualised in the research literature; ii) to detail how it has been measured in national and international surveys; and iii) to identify priority areas for statistical development. social capital as well as to invest in it directly. These are the objectives of the Social Capital Initiative (SCI). With the help of a generous grant of the Government of Denmark, the Initiative has funded a set of twelve projects which will help define and measure social capital social capital, we need to think about the multiple dimensions of social capital. High on the research priority list in the area of social capital, as far as I am concerned, is developing the theoretically coherent and empirically valid typologies or dimensions along which social capital should vary. I will give some examples of how social capital Our social capital index is more strongly correlated with all three of our employment benchmarks than is the Penn State index and with all five of our income and poverty benchmarks. For five of the eight, the correlation with our index is greater than 0.5 (or less than -0.5).