|
myregion.org is. . . |
| |
|
An organization of citizens and leaders from public, private and institutional sectors who have launched a program to prepare the Central Florida Region to compete more effectively in the 21st century while enhancing the quality of life of its citizenry. | |
| |
|
Upcoming Dates |
| |
|
January 9, 2006 Presentation to the Century Commission for a Sustainable Florida Tallahassee, FL
January 20-21, 2006
Regional Leadership Academy Orientation Disney Boardwalk Resort Lake Buena Vista, FL
January 25, 2006
Naturally Central Florida: Fitting the Pieces Together - Conversation with Carl Hiaasen
The Ball Room at Church Street, Orlando, FL
January 31, 2006 Quality of Life: Healthcare Workgroup Orlando Regional Chamber of Commerce
February 3, 2006 myregion.org New Board Member Orientation Orlando Regional Chamber of Commerce
February 10, 2006 myregion.org Board of Directors Meeting Hyatt Regency Orlando International Aiport Orlando, FL
March 2-3, 2006
Hispanic Summit Orange County Convention Center Orlando, FL
March 29-31, 2006
Regional Leadership Academy Strategy Session Hyatt Regency Orlando International Aiport Orlando, FL | |
|
|
|
|
| |
|  |
 |
 |
January 5, 2006
The Ties That Bind: The Results of the Central Florida Social Capital Study
Originally published on: Thursday, December 15, 2005 - Orlando Regional Chamber of Commerce
Welcome to The Ties that Bind: The Central Florida Social Capital Survey. This report includes an Executive Summary and Detailed Summary of the Report along with Marginal Frequencies, and Cross-tabulations and Correlations. The seven partners - University of Central Florida Metropolitan Center for Regional Studies, Community Foundation of Central Florida, Orlando Regional Chamber of Commerce, Heart of Florida United Way, myregion.org, Central Florida YMCA, and Florida's Blood Centers - invite you to read the detail and use the data to better understand how connected we are in the region, and how you can help build Social Capital in your neighborhood and across the region.
Overview: Robert Putnam’s path-breaking work, Bowling Alone: Collapse and Revival of the American Community, describes how civic ties in American society have weakened over the past several generations. The result in many communities is a shortage of “social capital”, the networks of family, neighbors and friends and the trust and reciprocity that flow from them. When social capital declines, the quality of education is threatened, public safety suffers, philanthropy weakens, economic development lags, and civic institutions become less responsive. A community without adequate social capital is distrustful, disengaged and disenfranchised.
What is Social Capital?: Social Capital is a way of conceptualizing or measuring how connected people are to one another. Just as economical capital is a measure of economic health, so is social capital a measure of the health of a community’s social fabric. Social capital exists when people enjoy strong connections to family, friends, neighbors, and civic institutions.
Why is Social Capital Important?: Social Capital is the glue that binds us together as families, neighborhoods, and communities. Communities with high social capital are communities where people know and take responsibility for one another, are active in civic projects and organizations, and bind themselves together to get things done.
What Will This Study Show Us?: Because so many people currently living in Central Florida have moved here from somewhere else, creating a sense of community here offers challenges that are different from those confronting other places. Utilizing the Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey created by the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, this study will give an understanding of how people currently residing in Central Florida view community. This in-depth survey probes into many aspects to determine how people spend their time and how they interact with their neighbors and co-workers.
This data PDF's below contain hundreds of pages of data and detail that can be used to better understand the results of the Survey. You'll find evidence that will give you, your business, community leaders, and your neighbors a better understanding of how far we've come in building a community of Social Capital. You'll also find data that we hope will spark new tools to help us with the challenges we face as we, the architects of the region's future, answer the question: How Shall we Grow?
Social Capital Total Marginals This is the detailed summary of The Central Florida Social Capital Survey.
Social Capital County Marginals This document contains the breakdown by county of all questions asked in the Central Florida Social Capital Survey.
Social Capital Analyses This is the socio-economic breakdown of information from The Central Florida Social Capital Survey .
Snapshot Report 10-31-05 Final This is a general snapshot of responses to questions from The Central Florida Social Capital Survey.
Social Capital Powerpoint Presentation This presentation was first presented on Wednesday, December 7, 2005.
[PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSION]
|
|
|