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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20211203T140000
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DTSTAMP:20260420T074654
CREATED:20210413T204725Z
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UID:10000172-1638540000-1638545400@www.intsocialcapital.org
SUMMARY:WEBINAR: G Tyge Payne: Social Capital and Family Entrepeneurship
DESCRIPTION:Invited Speaker\nProfessor G. Tyge Payne\nProfessor of Entrepreneurship\nLouisiana State University \nCertificate of attendance available \n			\n						Certificate of attendance\n					\n		https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fj-9fLxOE3Y \nOne of the core questions that is being asked by family business leaders in today’s fast-paced and uncertain environment is: How do we develop and sustain entrepreneurial thinking and behaviors over time? While not unique to family businesses\, the involvement of the family in business decisions and actions does create unique differences that should be considered when addressing entrepreneurial proclivities such as creativity\, innovativeness\, and proactiveness. This presentation is geared towards better understanding this issue of family entrepreneurship—the starting\, growing\, changing\, and transforming of businesses involving family collectives—by examining it through the lens of social capital.  Social capital is important—arguably\, fundamental—to understanding both entrepreneurship and family-controlled enterprises\, thus making it essential for understanding the challenges presented by our primary question about developing and sustaining entrepreneurship.  Specifically\, we will discuss how social networks can be utilized to develop and sustain entrepreneurship in family businesses by providing conduits for social capital in the form of information\, knowledge\, financial capital\, and other resources. Practical examples are given that may help families and family business leaders foster an environment that builds and supports the pursuit of opportunities. These will also be used to highlight research opportunities in the field. \n  \nTime converter at worldtimebuddy.com \nAbout the presenter:\nG. Tyge Payne is the H. Norman Saurage Jr. and Community Coffee Company Inc. Endowed Chair of Entrepreneurship in the Stephenson Department of Entrepreneurship & Information Systems\, E.J. Ourso College of Business\, Louisiana State University (LSU). He previously held the Kent R. Hance Regents Chair of Entrepreneurship at Texas Tech University. Dr. Payne has published work at the intersection of entrepreneurship and strategic management more than 80 times\, including publications in top journals such as Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice\, Family Business Review (FBR)\, Journal of Management\, Journal of Management Studies\, Organizational Science\, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal\, among others. He recently completed a three-year term as the Editor-in-Chief of FBR\, which is the leading journal dedicated to the study of family businesses. \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-tyge-payne-social-capital-and-family-entrepeneurship/
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211210T200000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211210T213000
DTSTAMP:20260420T074654
CREATED:20210413T204725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210413T204725Z
UID:10000179-1639166400-1639171800@www.intsocialcapital.org
SUMMARY:Discussion and Q&A Session on Social Capital - December 2021
DESCRIPTION:How the Session Will Work\nThe session will be based around questions submitted by participants and will include general discussions of social capital and related concepts. The session will focus on the theoretical and practical application of the concept including its use in research. \nSubmit the question you want answered or the issue you would like discussed when you register for the session below. \nThese sessions are a supportive way to connect with people. You can ask questions\, get advice\, discuss ideas or issues\, get suggestions for literature to read\, or you can just listen. This session is an opportunity to share your experience and expertise with others. It\’s a great way to take part in discourse related to social capital and find opportunities for mutual learning and the potential for collaboration. \nAbout the facilitator:Tristan Claridge has been researching social capital for over 20 years. He has explored the theoretical foundations of the concept and much of his work aims to bring conceptual and theoretical clarification. \n			Time converter at worldtimebuddy.comTime converter at worldtimebuddy.com
URL:https://www.intsocialcapital.org/event/discussion-and-qa-session-december-2021/
CATEGORIES:Q&A
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20211217T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20211217T153000
DTSTAMP:20260420T074654
CREATED:20210413T204725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T193147Z
UID:10000175-1639749600-1639755000@www.intsocialcapital.org
SUMMARY:WEBINAR: Professor Joseph D. Lewandowski: Sport and Social Capital?
DESCRIPTION:Invited Speaker\nProfessor Joseph D. Lewandowski\nProfessor of Philosophy at the University of Central Missouri (USA) \nCertificate of attendance available \n			\n						Certificate of attendance\n					\n		https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTNVzeF8LMA \nStudies in social capital\, as well as many NGO initiatives and related policy-driven government programs in the area of community development\, often appeal to the causal power of participation in sport to generate the kinds of generalized trust\, ties\, and networks that make for more cohesive and prosperous communities and\, indeed\, more democratic societies. In fact\, Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone (2001) takes as the centerpiece of its argument the notion that participation in bowling clubs in the United States contributed\, in no small way\, to the diversifying and strengthening of community and ‘making democracy work’ in America. In this way sport is often construed as a mechanism for the production of generalized trust and\, more specifically\, ‘bridging social capital’\, among various ethnoracial and socioeconomic groups. \nWith a focus on bowling and boxing\, this webinar scrutinizes the ostensible ‘bridging’ functions of sport in an effort to make explicit the limits of what participation in sport can be expected to contribute to the development of cohesive but diverse communities and a democratic way of life. As an alternative account\, it is argued that sport is best understood as a complex site of horizontal and vertical sociability. The extent to which the forms of sociability emergent in bowling alleys and boxing clubs are capitalized in ways that foster diverse communities and shared habits of democracy remains an open question. For participation in sport characteristically does not produce generalized trust and social capital but rather reproduces and reinforces the presence (or impoverishment) of such resources along ethnoracial and socioeconomic lines. \n  \n \nTime converter at worldtimebuddy.com \nAbout the presenter:\nJoseph D Lewandowski is an educator\, researcher and author whose work focuses on sport\, social capital\, and inequality in the urban milieu. The former holder of the Fulbright-Masaryk Distinguished Chair in Social Studies (Czech Republic)\, Lewandowski currently serves as Professor of Philosophy at the University of Central Missouri (USA). He is also a member of the editorial board of the Journal of the Philosophy of Sport and a working group fellow at the Legatum Institute. Among his many publications in social capital theory\, Lewandowski is the author of ‘Sport\, Trust\, and Social Capital’ (Comparative Sociology)\, co-editor of Trust and Transitions: Social Capital in a Changing World and\, more recently\, Urban Social Capital: Civil Society and City Life. His work has been published in German\, Czech\, and Polish\, and appears in journals such as Theory\, Culture\, and Society\, Journal of Poverty\, Journal of Social Philosophy\, Journal of the Philosophy of Sport\, Philosophy and Social Criticism\, and elsewhere. Lewandowski’s current book in the philosophy and sociology of sport\, On Boxing: Critical Interventions in the Bittersweet Science (Routledge\, 2022)\, explores the cultural and philosophical dimensions of professional pugilism\, and includes an extended discussion of boxing and social capital. \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-professor-joseph-d-lewandowski-sport-and-social-capital/
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