Contexts of social capital: social networks in markets, communities, and families
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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New York [u.a.]
Routledge
2009
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Routledge advances in sociology
43 |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 304 S. |
ISBN: | 9780415411172 0415411173 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of Tables xi
List of Figures xvii
List of Abbreviations xix
Preface xxi
Parti
Advances in Theory and Methods of Social Capital
1 Position Generators, Affiliations, and the Institutional
Logics of Social Capital: A Study of Taiwan Firms and
Individuals 3
RAY-MAY HSUNG AND RONALD L. BREIGER
2 Changing Places: The Influence of Meeting Places
on Recruiting Friends 28
BEATE VOLKER, HENK FLAP. AND GERALD MOLLENHORST
3 Does The Golden Rule Rule? 49
ROCHELLE R. C6TE, GABRIELE PL1CKERT, AND BARRY WELLM AN
4 Making Democracy Work via the Functioning of
Heterogeneous Personal Networks: An Empirical
Analysis Based on a Japanese Election Study 72
KEN ICHI 1KEDA AND TETSURO KOBAYASHI
Part II
Markets and Social Capital
5 The Context Challenge: Generalizing Social Capital
Processes Across Two Different Settings 93
BONNIE H. ERICKSON
viii Contents
6 The Transaction Cost: Embeddedness Approach to Studying
Chinese Outsourcing 115
JAR-DER LUO AND YUNG-CHU YEH
7 Constructed Network as Social Capital: The Transformation
of Taiwan s Small and Medium Enterprise Organization 139
CHIEH-HSUAN CHEN
Part III
Social Capital in Communities
8 Production and Returns of Social Capital: Evidence from
Urban China 163
NAN LIN, DAN AO, AND LIJUN SONG
9 The Distribution and Return of Social Capital in Taiwan 193
CHIH-JOU JAY CHEN
10 Social Capital in Communities, Development and
Integration: The Four Village Case Study in
Hungary, 2000 216
r6bert tardos
11 Distinctiveness and Disadvantage Among the Urban Poor:
Is Low Network Capital Really the Problem? 244
JEANNE S. HURLBERT, JOHN J. BEGGS, AND VALERIE A. HAINES
Part IV
Families and Social Capital
12 Parental Closure Effects on Learning: Coleman s
Theory of Social Capital on Learning Revisited 277
LY-YUN CHANG
13 Childcare Networks and Embedded Experiences 299
JOSEPH GALASKIEWICZ, BETH M. DUCKLES, AND OLGA MAYOROVA
Contents ix
14 The Immediate Returns on Time Investment in Daily
Contacts: Exploring the Network-Overlapping Effects
from Contact Diaries 327
YANG-CH1H FU
Contributors 349
Index 351
Tables
1.1 Summary of Human Capital and Social Capital Variables 10
1.2 Summary of Accessed Positions and Accessed Associations 11
1.2a Mean Number of Types of Associations 17
1.3 Unstandardized Regression Coefficients in Models
Predicting (Log) Income From Human Capital and
Social Capital Variables 19
2.1 Descriptive Statistics of Friends, Contexts, and Number
of Friends Per Context 34
2.2 Odds Ratio for Becoming Friends if Met in a
Particular Context 35
2.3 Multilevel Logistic Regression Analyses on the Likelihood
of a Tie to be a Friendship Tie, for Three Cohorts 37
2.4 Odds Ratios for Becoming Friends if Met in a Particular
Context 39
2.5 Trends in Contexts for Different Cohorts 42
3.1 Percentage of Network Members Providing Support
to Participants 56
3.2 Reciprocal Pattern of Resource Exchange Between
Network Members and Participants 59
3.3 Final Models of Cumulative Logit Analyses for
Reciprocal Exchanges of Network Members 60
4.1 Partial Correlation Between Network Diversity
and Participation 81
4.2 Partial Correlation Between Network Diversity and
Participation With Interactions 82
4.3 Heckman Regression Models Predicting Intolerance
With Interaction Variables 83
xii Tables
5.1 Predicting Global Social Capital (Multiple Regressions) 106
5.2 Predicting Local Social Capital (Multiple Regressions) 107
5.3 Social Capitals and Masteries (Multiple Regressions) 108
5.4 Social Capitals and Monies (Multiple Regressions) 109
5.5 Global and Local Social Capital (Multiple Regressions) 111
6.1 The Six Steps in the Outsourcing Process and
Governance Mechanisms 125
7.1 Two Types of Networks in Taiwan s Small and
Medium Enterprises 155
8.1 Summary of Sample Characteristics 169
8.2 Position Generator and Differential Access to General
Social Capital 172
8.3 Factor Structure of Access to General Social Capital 173
8.4 Position Generator and Differential Access to Political
Social Capital 174
8.5 Determinants of General Social Capital 178
8.6 Determinants of Political Social Capital 179
8.7 Multinomial Logistic Regression on Executive,
Professional, and Other Types of Jobs 181
8.8 Generalized Ordinal Logistic Regression on Supervision 183
8.9 OLS Regression on Annual Income by Types of Cities 185
8.10 Summary of Findings 187
9.1 Summary of Sample Characteristics (Percent or Mean) 199
9.2 Position Generator and Differential Access to General
Social Capital (Prior to Current Job) 200
9.3 Factor Structure of Access to General Social Capital
(Prior to Current Job) 201
9.4 OLS Estimates of the Determinants of Access to General
Social Capital (Prior to Current Job) 205
9.5 Parameter Estimates of Multinomial Logistic Model for
Determinants of Occupational Status 207
9.6 Parameter Estimates of Multinomial Logistic Model for
Supervision 209
9.7 OLS Estimates of the Determinants of Income 211
Tables xiii
10.1 The Scheme of the Two-dimensional (2*2)
Sample Design 222
10.2 An Overall Review of the Salience of Individual- and
Community-Level Assets Related to Social Capital in
the Four Communities 224
10.3 An Overview of Outcomes, With Social Network
Resources as Independent Variables, for the Four Cases 229
11.1 Comparison of Residents of Urban Poor and Adjacent
Middle-Class Areas on Network Capital and Individual
Characteristics 256
11.2 Predicting the Structure Element of Network Capital
of the Urban Poor 260
11.3 Predicting the Resource Element of Network Capital
in the Urban Poor 263
12.1 Descriptive Statistics of the Variables Under Study 282
12.2 Descriptive Analyses of the Schooling Systems by
Program, Sector, and Family Background 286
12.3 Regression Analyses of Parental Closure Effects on
Wave 1 and Wave 2 Ability Scores, Respectively 289
12.4 Regression Analyses of Parental Closure Effects on
Wave 2 Cognitive Ability Score, Net of Family
Background and School Characteristics 291
12.5 The Effects of Parental Closure, Intergenerational
Transmission of Social Resources, and Peer Structure
on Wave 2 Cognitive Ability Score 293
13.1 Cross Tabulation of Providers and Activities 308
13.2 OLS Regression Model with Family and Friends
Providing Childcare as Dependent Variable 311
13.3 Probit Models with Home of Relative/Friend (vs. Other)
as Dependent Variable 313
13.4 Probit Model with Knowing Nonkin Household Members
Three Years or More as Dependent Variable 315
13.5 Probit Model with Know Parents of All Children (vs. Not)
as Dependent Variable 316
14.1 Number of Contacts in Fifty-Two Diaries 334
14.2 Multilevel Effects on the Subjective Evaluation
of Contacts 337
14.3 Construct of Family Network Closure 338
xiv Tables
14.4 Multilevel Effects on the Significance of Contacts by
the Degree of Network Closure 339
14.5 Multilevel Effects on the Perception of Contacts by
the Degree of Network Closure 340
APPENDIX
Al.l The Relative Interaction of Two Rows with the
Same Column 24
A4.1 Summary of Position-Generator Variables in the Sample 87
A10.1.1 Basic Data of SC Components for the Cases of the
2000 Four Village Study and Comparable Indicators
of the 1997-98 National Studies 234
A10.1.2 Number of Close Family and Kin Relationships,
the Latter by Residential Locations (Means) 235
A10.1.3 Travel Frequencies by Destinations for the Adult
Populations of the Four Villages (Means, 4-Point
Scales Each, Except Index of Travels Abroad,
1 = Never . . . 4 = Last Month) 235
A10.1.4 Community Network Properties Based on Household-
Level and Individual-Level Ties (UCINET6, Netminer,
SPSS ) 236
A10.1.5 Participation in Local Associations and Institutions
of Local Reciprocity, by the Four Cases (Percentage) 237
A10.2.1 Correlations Between Types of Tie and Various Kinds
of Benefits, by the Four Cases (Pearson R Coeff) 237
A10.2.2 Regressions of Various Kinds of Benefits Depending
on Various Types of Tie, Controlling Age, Sex, and
Education, by the Four Cases (Optimal Scaling
Categorical Regression Analysis) 238
A10.2.3 Electoral Participation Depending on a Composite
Measure of SC, Socioeconomic Resources, and
Neighborhood Belonging (CATREG Optimal
Scaling; Standardized Regression Coefficients
and Importance Coefficients) 239
A10.2.4 Household-Level Correlations Between Electoral
Participation* and Social Capital-Related and
Contextual Variables, by the Four Cases (Pearson R
Coeff, Resp. Optimal Scaling Correlation Coeff.) 239
Tables xv
A10.2.5 Household-Level Regressions of Electoral
Participation* Depending on Social Capital-Related
and Contextual Variables, by the Four Cases
(Optimal Scaling, Categorical Regression Analysis) 239
A14.1 Sociodemographic Characteristics of Informers 343
A14.2 Characteristics of Contacts 344
A14.3 Factor Analysis of the Ego/Alter Tie Strength 345
Figures
1.1 An institutional logic: How positions are accessed through
intermediary roles. 13
1.2 An institutional logic: Access of positions through
job rank. 16
1.3 An institutional logic: Access to associations through
job rank. 17
2.1 Network of social contexts where friends are met for
the cohort of individuals born between 1935 and 1950. 40
2.2 Network of social contexts where friends are met for
the cohort of individuals born between 1966 and 1982. 41
3.1a Pathways to reciprocated emotional support. 63
3.1b Pathways to reciprocated minor services. 64
3.1c Pathways to reciprocated major services. 64
6.1 The three categories of Chinese guanxi and real trust in
each category. 123
8.1 Production of and returns to social capital in the
labor market. 165
10.1 Local centrality and network location of families with
high and low electoral participation. 231
13.1 Probability of knowing parents of other children. 318
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Tables xi
List of Figures xvii
List of Abbreviations xix
Preface xxi
Parti
Advances in Theory and Methods of Social Capital
1 Position Generators, Affiliations, and the Institutional
Logics of Social Capital: A Study of Taiwan Firms and
Individuals 3
RAY-MAY HSUNG AND RONALD L. BREIGER
2 Changing Places: The Influence of Meeting Places
on Recruiting Friends 28
BEATE VOLKER, HENK FLAP. AND GERALD MOLLENHORST
3 Does The Golden Rule Rule? 49
ROCHELLE R. C6TE, GABRIELE PL1CKERT, AND BARRY WELLM AN
4 Making Democracy Work via the Functioning of
Heterogeneous Personal Networks: An Empirical
Analysis Based on a Japanese Election Study 72
KEN'ICHI 1KEDA AND TETSURO KOBAYASHI
Part II
Markets and Social Capital
5 The Context Challenge: Generalizing Social Capital
Processes Across Two Different Settings 93
BONNIE H. ERICKSON
viii Contents
6 The Transaction Cost: Embeddedness Approach to Studying
Chinese Outsourcing 115
JAR-DER LUO AND YUNG-CHU YEH
7 Constructed Network as Social Capital: The Transformation
of Taiwan's Small and Medium Enterprise Organization 139
CHIEH-HSUAN CHEN
Part III
Social Capital in Communities
8 Production and Returns of Social Capital: Evidence from
Urban China 163
NAN LIN, DAN AO, AND LIJUN SONG
9 The Distribution and Return of Social Capital in Taiwan 193
CHIH-JOU JAY CHEN
10 Social Capital in Communities, Development and
Integration: The Four Village Case Study in
Hungary, 2000 216
r6bert tardos
11 Distinctiveness and Disadvantage Among the Urban Poor:
Is Low Network Capital Really the Problem? 244
JEANNE S. HURLBERT, JOHN J. BEGGS, AND VALERIE A. HAINES
Part IV
Families and Social Capital
12 Parental Closure Effects on Learning: Coleman's
Theory of Social Capital on Learning Revisited 277
LY-YUN CHANG
13 Childcare Networks and Embedded Experiences 299
JOSEPH GALASKIEWICZ, BETH M. DUCKLES, AND OLGA MAYOROVA
Contents ix
14 The Immediate Returns on Time Investment in Daily
Contacts: Exploring the Network-Overlapping Effects
from Contact Diaries 327
YANG-CH1H FU
Contributors 349
Index 351
Tables
1.1 Summary of Human Capital and Social Capital Variables 10
1.2 Summary of Accessed Positions and Accessed Associations 11
1.2a Mean Number of Types of Associations 17
1.3 Unstandardized Regression Coefficients in Models
Predicting (Log) Income From Human Capital and
Social Capital Variables 19
2.1 Descriptive Statistics of Friends, Contexts, and Number
of Friends Per Context 34
2.2 Odds Ratio for Becoming Friends if Met in a
Particular Context 35
2.3 Multilevel Logistic Regression Analyses on the Likelihood
of a Tie to be a Friendship Tie, for Three Cohorts 37
2.4 Odds Ratios for Becoming Friends if Met in a Particular
Context 39
2.5 Trends in Contexts for Different Cohorts 42
3.1 Percentage of Network Members Providing Support
to Participants 56
3.2 Reciprocal Pattern of Resource Exchange Between
Network Members and Participants 59
3.3 Final Models of Cumulative Logit Analyses for
Reciprocal Exchanges of Network Members 60
4.1 Partial Correlation Between Network Diversity
and Participation 81
4.2 Partial Correlation Between Network Diversity and
Participation With Interactions 82
4.3 Heckman Regression Models Predicting Intolerance
With Interaction Variables 83
xii Tables
5.1 Predicting Global Social Capital (Multiple Regressions) 106
5.2 Predicting Local Social Capital (Multiple Regressions) 107
5.3 Social Capitals and Masteries (Multiple Regressions) 108
5.4 Social Capitals and Monies (Multiple Regressions) 109
5.5 Global and Local Social Capital (Multiple Regressions) 111
6.1 The Six Steps in the Outsourcing Process and
Governance Mechanisms 125
7.1 Two Types of Networks in Taiwan's Small and
Medium Enterprises 155
8.1 Summary of Sample Characteristics 169
8.2 Position Generator and Differential Access to General
Social Capital 172
8.3 Factor Structure of Access to General Social Capital 173
8.4 Position Generator and Differential Access to Political
Social Capital 174
8.5 Determinants of General Social Capital 178
8.6 Determinants of Political Social Capital 179
8.7 Multinomial Logistic Regression on Executive,
Professional, and Other Types of Jobs 181
8.8 Generalized Ordinal Logistic Regression on Supervision 183
8.9 OLS Regression on Annual Income by Types of Cities 185
8.10 Summary of Findings 187
9.1 Summary of Sample Characteristics (Percent or Mean) 199
9.2 Position Generator and Differential Access to General
Social Capital (Prior to Current Job) 200
9.3 Factor Structure of Access to General Social Capital
(Prior to Current Job) 201
9.4 OLS Estimates of the Determinants of Access to General
Social Capital (Prior to Current Job) 205
9.5 Parameter Estimates of Multinomial Logistic Model for
Determinants of Occupational Status 207
9.6 Parameter Estimates of Multinomial Logistic Model for
Supervision 209
9.7 OLS Estimates of the Determinants of Income 211
Tables xiii
10.1 The Scheme of the Two-dimensional (2*2)
Sample Design 222
10.2 An Overall Review of the Salience of Individual- and
Community-Level Assets Related to Social Capital in
the Four Communities 224
10.3 An Overview of Outcomes, With Social Network
Resources as Independent Variables, for the Four Cases 229
11.1 Comparison of Residents of Urban Poor and Adjacent
Middle-Class Areas on Network Capital and Individual
Characteristics 256
11.2 Predicting the Structure Element of Network Capital
of the Urban Poor 260
11.3 Predicting the Resource Element of Network Capital
in the Urban Poor 263
12.1 Descriptive Statistics of the Variables Under Study 282
12.2 Descriptive Analyses of the Schooling Systems by
Program, Sector, and Family Background 286
12.3 Regression Analyses of Parental Closure Effects on
Wave 1 and Wave 2 Ability Scores, Respectively 289
12.4 Regression Analyses of Parental Closure Effects on
Wave 2 Cognitive Ability Score, Net of Family
Background and School Characteristics 291
12.5 The Effects of Parental Closure, Intergenerational
Transmission of Social Resources, and Peer Structure
on Wave 2 Cognitive Ability Score 293
13.1 Cross Tabulation of Providers and Activities 308
13.2 OLS Regression Model with Family and Friends
Providing Childcare as Dependent Variable 311
13.3 Probit Models with Home of Relative/Friend (vs. Other)
as Dependent Variable 313
13.4 Probit Model with Knowing Nonkin Household Members
Three Years or More as Dependent Variable 315
13.5 Probit Model with Know Parents of All Children (vs. Not)
as Dependent Variable 316
14.1 Number of Contacts in Fifty-Two Diaries 334
14.2 Multilevel Effects on the Subjective Evaluation
of Contacts 337
14.3 Construct of Family Network Closure 338
xiv Tables
14.4 Multilevel Effects on the Significance of Contacts by
the Degree of Network Closure 339
14.5 Multilevel Effects on the Perception of Contacts by
the Degree of Network Closure 340
APPENDIX
Al.l The Relative Interaction of Two Rows with the
Same Column 24
A4.1 Summary of Position-Generator Variables in the Sample 87
A10.1.1 Basic Data of SC Components for the Cases of the
2000 Four Village Study and Comparable Indicators
of the 1997-98 National Studies 234
A10.1.2 Number of Close Family and Kin Relationships,
the Latter by Residential Locations (Means) 235
A10.1.3 Travel Frequencies by Destinations for the Adult
Populations of the Four Villages (Means, 4-Point
Scales Each, Except Index of Travels Abroad,
1 = Never . . . 4 = Last Month) 235
A10.1.4 Community Network Properties Based on Household-
Level and Individual-Level Ties (UCINET6, Netminer,
SPSS ) 236
A10.1.5 Participation in Local Associations and Institutions
of Local Reciprocity, by the Four Cases (Percentage) 237
A10.2.1 Correlations Between Types of Tie and Various Kinds
of Benefits, by the Four Cases (Pearson R Coeff) 237
A10.2.2 Regressions of Various Kinds of Benefits Depending
on Various Types of Tie, Controlling Age, Sex, and
Education, by the Four Cases (Optimal Scaling
Categorical Regression Analysis) 238
A10.2.3 Electoral Participation Depending on a Composite
Measure of SC, Socioeconomic Resources, and
Neighborhood Belonging (CATREG Optimal
Scaling; Standardized Regression Coefficients
and Importance Coefficients) 239
A10.2.4 Household-Level Correlations Between Electoral
Participation* and Social Capital-Related and
Contextual Variables, by the Four Cases (Pearson R
Coeff, Resp. Optimal Scaling Correlation Coeff.) 239
Tables xv
A10.2.5 Household-Level Regressions of Electoral
Participation* Depending on Social Capital-Related
and Contextual Variables, by the Four Cases
(Optimal Scaling, Categorical Regression Analysis) 239
A14.1 Sociodemographic Characteristics of Informers 343
A14.2 Characteristics of Contacts 344
A14.3 Factor Analysis of the Ego/Alter Tie Strength 345
Figures
1.1 An institutional logic: How positions are accessed through
intermediary roles. 13
1.2 An institutional logic: Access of positions through
job rank. 16
1.3 An institutional logic: Access to associations through
job rank. 17
2.1 Network of social contexts where friends are met for
the cohort of individuals born between 1935 and 1950. 40
2.2 Network of social contexts where friends are met for
the cohort of individuals born between 1966 and 1982. 41
3.1a Pathways to reciprocated emotional support. 63
3.1b Pathways to reciprocated minor services. 64
3.1c Pathways to reciprocated major services. 64
6.1 The three categories of Chinese guanxi and real trust in
each category. 123
8.1 Production of and returns to social capital in the
labor market. 165
10.1 Local centrality and network location of families with
high and low electoral participation. 231
13.1 Probability of knowing parents of other children. 318 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author2 | Hsung, Ray-May |
author2_role | edt |
author2_variant | r m h rmh |
author_facet | Hsung, Ray-May |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV022877760 |
classification_rvk | QC 010 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)612143365 (DE-599)KBVHUBHU002352662 |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 1. publ. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV022877760 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T18:49:29Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:07:33Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780415411172 0415411173 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016082783 |
oclc_num | 612143365 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-188 |
physical | 304 S. |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
series | Routledge advances in sociology |
series2 | Routledge advances in sociology |
spelling | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families ed. by Ray-May Hsung ... 1. publ. New York [u.a.] Routledge 2009 304 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Routledge advances in sociology 43 Soziales Kapital (DE-588)4510173-5 gnd rswk-swf Soziales Netzwerk (DE-588)4055762-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Soziales Kapital (DE-588)4510173-5 s Soziales Netzwerk (DE-588)4055762-5 s DE-604 Hsung, Ray-May edt Routledge advances in sociology 43 (DE-604)BV013741699 43 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016082783&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families Routledge advances in sociology Soziales Kapital (DE-588)4510173-5 gnd Soziales Netzwerk (DE-588)4055762-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4510173-5 (DE-588)4055762-5 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families |
title_auth | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families |
title_exact_search | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families |
title_exact_search_txtP | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families |
title_full | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families ed. by Ray-May Hsung ... |
title_fullStr | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families ed. by Ray-May Hsung ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Contexts of social capital social networks in markets, communities, and families ed. by Ray-May Hsung ... |
title_short | Contexts of social capital |
title_sort | contexts of social capital social networks in markets communities and families |
title_sub | social networks in markets, communities, and families |
topic | Soziales Kapital (DE-588)4510173-5 gnd Soziales Netzwerk (DE-588)4055762-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Soziales Kapital Soziales Netzwerk Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016082783&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV013741699 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hsungraymay contextsofsocialcapitalsocialnetworksinmarketscommunitiesandfamilies |