***** To join INSNA, visit http://www.insna.org *****
And don't forget Part I, on the same topic, with different papers
Vol 49, No 8
Barry Wellman
_______________________________________________________________________
FRSC INSNA Founder University of Toronto
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman twitter: @barrywellman
NETWORKED:The New Social Operating System. Lee Rainie & Barry Wellman
MIT Press http://amzn.to/zXZg39 Print $14 Kindle $9
_______________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2015 14:35:41 -0700
From: [log in to unmask]
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: American Behavioral Scientist Table of Contents for Special Issue
Title: Social Networks in East and Southeast Asia,
Part II: August 2015; Vol. 59, No. 9
[Sociology Portal banner advert.JPG]
[pub-logo.gif]
HOME | ONLINEFIRST | ALL ISSUES | SUBSCRIBE | rss RSS | EMAIL ALERTS | FEEDBACK
American Behavioral Scientist
Special Issue Title: Social Networks in East and Southeast Asia, Part II
August 2015; Vol. 59, No. 9
Introduction
Social Networks in East and Southeast Asia II: Labor Migration, Opportunity, Social Media, and Well-Being
Vincent Chua and Barry Wellman
Articles
Network Effects in Migrant Remittances: Evidence From Household, Sibling, and Village Ties in Nang Rong, Thailand
Filiz Garip, Burak Eskici, and Ben Snyder
Can Family Financial Resources Buy Friends?: Family Financial Resources and Friendship Patterns Among Migrant Workers in China
Eric Fong and Yuying Tong
Birds of a Feather: A Case Study of Friendship Networks of Mainland Chinese College Students in Hong Kong
Danching Ruan and Shu Zhu
How Do Singaporeans Connect? Ties Among Chinese, Malays, and Indians
Vincent Chua
What Affects the Spiral of Silence and the Hard Core on Twitter? An Analysis of the Nuclear Power Issue in Japan
Kakuko Miyata, Hitoshi Yamamoto, and Yuki Ogawa
Trend Dynamics and Attention in Chinese Social Media
Louis Lei Yu, Sitaram Asur, and Bernardo A. Huberman
The Implications of Networked Individualism for Social Participation: How Mobile Phone, E-mail, and IM Networks Afford Social Participation for Rural Residents in
Taiwan
Shu-Fen Tseng and Yuli Patrick Hsieh
Does Knowing People in Authority Protect or Hurt? Authoritative Contacts and Depression in Urban China
Lijun Song
Social Ties, Communication Channels, and Personal Well-Being: A Study of the Networked Lives of College Students in Singapore
Hua Wang, Vincent Chua, and Michael A. Stefanone
This message was sent to [log in to unmask]
Unsubscribe from or edit your subscription for this service.
Or by mail: Customer Service * 425 Broadway St * Redwood City, CA 94063 * U.S.A.
HOME | ONLINEFIRST | ALL ISSUES | SUBSCRIBE | rss RSS | EMAIL ALERTS | FEEDBACK
[trackpixel.gif?q=etoc_spabs&u=23318880&d=07132015]
_____________________________________________________________________
SOCNET is a service of INSNA, the professional association for social
network researchers (http://www.insna.org). To unsubscribe, send
an email message to [log in to unmask] containing the line
UNSUBSCRIBE SOCNET in the body of the message.
|