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X-WR-CALNAME:International Social Capital Association (ISCA)
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210611T103000
DTSTAMP:20260414T020145
CREATED:20210413T204725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220630T210951Z
UID:10000164-1623402000-1623407400@www.intsocialcapital.org
SUMMARY:WEBINAR: Dr Evangelos Ntontis: What lies beyond social capital? Social identities and community resilience to climate change
DESCRIPTION:Invited Speaker\nDr Evangelos Ntontis\nLecturer in Social Psychology\, School of Psychology and Life Sciences\nCanterbury Christ Church University \nCertificate of attendance available \n			\n						Certificate of attendance\n					\n		https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N29Av46tzJw \nClimate change is increasing the prevalence and impact of extreme events\, which may have severe psychosocial aftereffects for the people and communities who are affected. To mitigate their impact\, governments advocate developing community resilience. Most approaches to community resilience employ the concept of social capital\, suggesting that communities with more dense preexisting networks of trust and reciprocity are more likely to prepare for\, respond to\, and recover more effectively from disasters. Notwithstanding the benefits of the social capital approach in explaining aspects of community resilience\, I will argue that social capital cannot account for microprocesses of disaster behavior regarding the mobilization of communities and the emergence of groups in absence of pre-existing bonds or networks. Using empirical research I will demonstrate how community resilience theorizing can benefit through insights from the social identity approach in social psychology and principles of collective psychosocial resilience—the way that shared identification allows groups to emerge\, coordinate\, express solidarity\, and provide social support. Overall\, I will argue that this approach can overcome the limitations of social capital because it can explain the processes of group behavior in disasters\, promotes bottom-up approaches to community resilience\, recognizes emergent communities\, and suggests evidence-based recommendations for policy and practice. The links between social capital and the social identity approach will also be discussed. \n  \nTime converter at worldtimebuddy.com \nAbout the presenter:\nI completed my undergraduate studies in Philosophy\, Education\, and Psychology at the University of Ioannina in Greece (2009-2013)\, and subsequently did an MSc in Psychological Research Methods at the University of Dundee (2014-2015). Between 2015-2018 I completed my PhD at the University of Sussex through a scholarship provided by Public Health England. In my doctoral research I examined how community group emerge and respond to flooding\, and how group processes in disaster behaviour can be useful for community resilience policy and practice. Since 2018 I am a lecturer in social psychology at the School of Psychology and Life Sciences at Canterbury Christ Church University\, UK. My general interests include collective behaviour in disasters\, social movements\, leadership\, and mass mobilization. Recently I developed an interest in how systemic issues can operate as stressors that can exert a negative influence on mental health and wellbeing. I am an advocate of mixed methods research and use both qualitative (discursive\, phenomenological) and quantitative (survey\, experimental) approaches to data collection and analysis. \nAbout Our Webinar Series\nThis event is part of our regular webinar sessions for social capital researchers including PhD/master students. These sessions include invited presentations from prominent scholars as well as presentations by PhD students and experts in professional practice.\nFor social capital researchers\, these sessions are an opportunity to hear about the latest social capital research and insights from scholars working on the concept. They can be a great way to connect with people\, to get advice\, discuss ideas or issues\, get suggestions for literature to read\, or you can just listen. \nAre you researching social capital and want to present your research? Click here for more information and to submit a proposal. \nGenerally\, presentations can be 20 to 30 mins. The content of your presentation will depend on your research stage.
URL:https://www.intsocialcapital.org/event/webinar-dr-evangelos-ntontis-what-lies-beyond-social-capital/
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210611T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210611T203000
DTSTAMP:20260414T020145
CREATED:20210413T204725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220630T210135Z
UID:10000163-1623438000-1623443400@www.intsocialcapital.org
SUMMARY:WEBINAR: Assoc. Prof. Paul Haynes: Assembling Social Capital
DESCRIPTION:Invited Speaker\nAssociate Professor Paul Haynes\nLecturer in the School of Management\, Royal Holloway\,\nUniversity of London \nCertificate of attendance available \n			\n						Certificate of attendance\n					\n		https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpTAsSCvP4k \nAccording to Ben Fine: “social capital is to social science as McDonald’s is to gourmet food” (Fine 2010: 21). While this is not exactly a great endorsement\, it suggests that they are comprised of the same entities\, which offers the possibility\, at least\, to conceptualise what can be done to make the social capital concept more appetising for social theorists. This presentation begins by identifying some of the weaknesses of the social capital concept and offers an approach with which to address these limitations. Using insights from the work of Deleuze and Guattari (but not DeLanda!)\, social capital can be retrofitted into social assemblages. This promises to give more specificity to the structure of social capital and more insight into the mechanisms through which assemblages are shaped.Time converter at worldtimebuddy.com \nAbout the presenter:\nPaul Haynes teaches Marketing at the School of Business and Management\, Royal Holloway\, University of London.  His core research interests include the impact of networks and networking on innovation and marketing practices (branding\, social innovation\, technology\, money\, etc.).  He previously worked at Cambridge University researching new energy technologies.  Paul holds an MA from Warwick University and a PhD from Lancaster University\, with a thesis on non-linear dynamics and new technologies. He has held post-doctoral positions at Trinity College\, Dublin\, and the Saïd Business School\, Oxford University and a Lecturer position at Pembroke College\, Cambridge. \n \nAbout Our Webinar Series\nThis event is part of our regular webinar sessions for social capital researchers including PhD/master students. These sessions include invited presentations from prominent scholars as well as presentations by PhD students and experts in professional practice.\nFor social capital researchers\, these sessions are an opportunity to hear about the latest social capital research and insights from scholars working on the concept. They can be a great way to connect with people\, to get advice\, discuss ideas or issues\, get suggestions for literature to read\, or you can just listen. \nAre you researching social capital and want to present your research? Click here for more information and to submit a proposal. \nGenerally\, presentations can be 20 to 30 mins. The content of your presentation will depend on your research stage.
URL:https://www.intsocialcapital.org/event/webinar-prof-paul-haynes-assembling-social-capital/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210625T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210625T153000
DTSTAMP:20260414T020145
CREATED:20210413T204725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220630T205410Z
UID:10000161-1624629600-1624635000@www.intsocialcapital.org
SUMMARY:WEBINAR: Prof. Gregory Fulkerson: Disaster and the Destruction of Social Capital: The Effect of a COVID Outbreak on a College Campus
DESCRIPTION:Invited Speaker\nProfessor Gregory Fulkerson\nProfessor and Chair of Sociology\nThe State University of New York (SUNY) \nCertificate of attendance available \n			\n						Certificate of attendance\n					\n		https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UmcgHt-GCfE \nThis presentation will consider the impact of a COVID outbreak on social capital by comparing survey data from two colleges. One college had no outbreak and serves as a control. The other college experienced a devastating outbreak in the Fall of 2020. As the same survey questions were asked of each college\, we are able to compare the impact of the outbreak on social capital\, as indicated by questions surrounding trust in others to engage in protective practices such as masking and social distancing. This quasi-experimental design provides evidence that disasters can be harmful to level of social capital. The broader literature on disasters and social capital will inform the analysis and interpretation. \n  \nTime converter at worldtimebuddy.com \nAbout the presenter:\nGregory Fulkerson\, Ph.D.\, is Professor and Chair of Sociology at SUNY Oneonta. He received his Ph.D. in Sociology from North Caroline State University with expertise in the areas of Global Social Change and Development and Rural and Community Sociology. He has devoted considerable scholarly attention to the concept of social capital\, particularly in relation to natural disasters. He is co-editor of the Studies in Urban-Rural Dynamics book series with Lexington/Rowman & Littlefield and has co-authored (with Dr. Alexander Thomas) two recent books for the series—Urbanormativity (2019) and Urban Dependency (2021). Each of these works incorporate ideas informed by Bourdieu’s notions of capital in its various forms to better understand urban-rural systems and interactions. He is currently part of a multi-agency regional consortium investigating the COVID outbreak in central New York State. \nAbout Our Webinar Series\nThis event is part of our regular webinar sessions for social capital researchers including PhD/master students. These sessions include invited presentations from prominent scholars as well as presentations by PhD students and experts in professional practice.\nFor social capital researchers\, these sessions are an opportunity to hear about the latest social capital research and insights from scholars working on the concept. They can be a great way to connect with people\, to get advice\, discuss ideas or issues\, get suggestions for literature to read\, or you can just listen. \nAre you researching social capital and want to present your research? Click here for more information and to submit a proposal. \nGenerally\, presentations can be 20 to 30 mins. The content of your presentation will depend on your research stage.
URL:https://www.intsocialcapital.org/event/webinar-prof-gregory-fulkerson-disaster-and-the-destruction-of-social-capital/
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