Social Capital Quotes

Quotes tagged as "social-capital" Showing 1-19 of 19
“At Mayflower-Plymouth, we like to invest multiple kinds of Capital into businesses — financial capital, social capital, intellectual capital and more. We have a holistic approach to investing and Asset Management.”
Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr, CEO of Mayflower-Plymouth

Tanner Colby
“You are the sum total of the people you meet and interact with in the world. Whether it’s your family, peers, or co-workers, the opportunities you have and the things that you learn all come through doors that other people open for you.”
Tanner Colby, Some of My Best Friends Are Black: The Strange Story of Integration in America

Wataru Watari
“Anyway. I think forcing yourself to keep up appearances and putting up this identity that isn't yours, a mask you don't wear when you're alone, is phony. If you have to do all that stuff to get someone to love you, then can you really say they love you and who you really are? Once you change yourself to win affection, to win love, I don't even know if you can still call you you. If you've built your relationship on pretense and lies, it'll probably fail in some way or another, and if you've fundamentally changed yourself, then it's not really you.”
Wataru Watari, やはり俺の青春ラブコメはまちがっている。5

Robert D. Putnam
“Slavery was, in fact, a social system designed to destroy social capital among slaves and between slaves and freemen.”
Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community

Wataru Watari
“There comes a time or two in life when you should face isolation. No, you have to. Constantly being accompanied, having someone by your side always and forever -- that is far more abnormal and creepy. I'm positive you can only learn and feel certain things when you're alone. If there are lessons to gain from having friends, then so also are there lessons from not having friends. These two things are two sides of the same coin and should be treated as equally valuable. So this moment, too, will also have worth for that girl.”
Wataru Watari, やはり俺の青春ラブコメはまちがっている。4

Yuval Noah Harari
“So the best advice I could give a fifteen-year-old stuck in an outdated school somewhere in Mexico, India or Alabama is: don’t rely on the adults too much. Most of them mean well, but they just don’t understand the world.”
Yuval Noah Harari, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century

Tim Harford
“We still don't have a good word to describe what is missing in Cameroon, indeed in poor countries across the world. But we are starting to understand what it is. Some people call it 'social capital, or maybe 'trust'. Others call it 'the rule of law', or 'institutions'. But these are just labels. The problem is that Cameroon, like other poor countries, is a topsy-turvy world in which it's in most people's interest to take action that directly or indirectly damages everyone else.”
Tim Harford, The Undercover Economist

“Social capital is the new gold. Add value to others, value others and you will be valued.”
Lynn Ujiagbe

Juliana Barbassa
“interactions were valuable ways of accumulating social capital.”
Juliana Barbassa, Dancing with the Devil in the City of God: Rio de Janeiro on the Brink

Safiya Umoja Noble
“If one holds power, one can withstand or buffer misrepresentation at a group level and often at the individual level. Marginalized and oppressed people are linked to the status of their group and are less likely to be afforded individual status and insulation...”
Safiya Umoja Noble

Wataru Watari
“That's exactly why you have to be the one to bully yourself. You always have to have that calm and cool person inside you who will shoot you that chilly glare: Of course not. I don't trust other people much, but I trust myself less.”
Wataru Watari, やはり俺の青春ラブコメはまちがっている。5

“Social infrastructure is not "social capital" -- a concept commonly used to measure people's relationships and interpersonal networks -- but the physical conditions that determine whether social capital develops. When social infrastructure is robust, it fosters contact, mutual support, and collaboration among friends and neighbors; when degraded, it inhibits social activity, leaving families and individuals to fend for themselves. Social infrastructure is crucially important, because local, face-to-face interactions -- at the school, the playground, and the corner diner -- are the building blocks of all public life. People forge bonds in places that have healthy social infrastructures -- not because they set out to build community, but because when people engage in sustained, recurrent interaction, particularly while doing things they enjoy, relationships inevitably grow.”
Eric Klinenberg (author)

Robert D. Putnam
“Light-touch government works more efficiently in the presence of social capital. Police close more cases when citizens monitor neighborhood comings and goings. Child welfare departments do a better job of “family preservation” when neighbors and relatives provide social support to troubled parents. Public schools teach better when parents volunteer in classrooms and ensure that kids do their homework. When community involvement is lacking, the burdens on government employees—bureaucrats, social workers, teachers, and so forth—are that much greater and success that much more elusive.”
Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community

“To attain, and to keep, a professional-managerial job requires class-specific human capital. Developing and displaying that capital is a central preoccupation of upper-middle class life.”
Susan T. Fiske, Facing Social Class: How Societal Rank Influences Interaction

Peter Temin
“Fish do not know they are living in water, and members of the FTE sector are not aware of the social capital that surrounds and sustains them.”
Peter Temin, The Vanishing Middle Class: Prejudice and Power in a Dual Economy

“Granting that you have more money than others, and that you don’t deserve such wealth—but stopping there—allows you to settle the score by paying your taxes and advocating more redistribution. This reductive attitude toward inequality has the added comfort of justifying nasty judgments about the other side.”
Timothy P. Carney, Alienated America: Why Some Places Thrive While Others Collapse

“But what if what the working class—white, black, Hispanic, etc.— needs most isn’t a check from the government but inclusion in community? And what if the most accessible form of community—the church—is under constant assault by both culture and the government? And finally, what if the elites frowning upon the deplorable poor won’t include them in their community, citing their deplorability?”
Timothy P. Carney, Alienated America: Why Some Places Thrive While Others Collapse

Roger Scruton
“Burke's complaint against the [(French)] revolutionaries was that they assumed the right to spend all trusts and endowments on their own self-made emergency. Schools, church foundations, hospitals - all institutions that had been founded by people, now dead, for the benefit of their successors - were expropriated or destroyed, the result being the total waste of accumulated savings, leading to massive inflation, the collapse of education and the loss of the traditional forms of social and medical relief. In this way contempt for the dead leads to the disenfranchisement of the unborn, and all that result is not, perhaps, inevitable, it has been repeated by all subsequent revolutions. Through their contempt for the intentions and emotions of those who had laid things by, revolutions have systematically destroyed the stock of social capital, and always revolutionaries justify this by impeccable utilitarian thinking.”
Roger Scruton, Conservatism: An Invitation to the Great Tradition

Elaine Castillo
“Paz was a few years older than her; looked younger. Hero saw her alone on the veranda, in a black dress patterned with what looked like large sampaguita vines. Her center-parted hair reached just to the top of her ass; it was the most expensive-looking thing about her. She appeared to understand that beauty, at least, was also a kind of wealth.”
Elaine Castillo, America Is Not the Heart