Workshop: Negative Ties and Social Networks
19-20 April, 2012
Keynote speakers (confirmed):
Joe Labianca (
Negative Asymmetry in the Social Ledger: Bringing Together Social Network Analyses of Relational Content and Structure
http://gatton.uky.edu/Content.asp?PageName=FRIndProfile&ID=541
Patrick Doreian (
Modeling the Dynamics of Structural Balance: Problems and Prospects
Robert Faris (
Where Do Our Enemies Come From?
http://sociology.ucdavis.edu/people/rwfaris
A detailed preliminary program can be found at the workshop website: http://negativeties.szisz.hu
Aim of the workshop:
Social networks play a very important role in a wide range of social problems: in promoting high performance, reducing conflicts and enhancing integration. Ties and networks, however, are usually considered in positive terms. Although negative ties are less frequent than positive ones, their occurrence may be more influential: they can ruin performance, induce conflict, and hamper cohesion of the collective much more than the extent to which positive relations help. It is therefore high time to discover the true nature and mechanisms of negative networks and develop new methods to analyze their dynamics. The workshop is intended to bring together scholars who are interested in the theory and empirical analysis of negative ties, could it be in the context of social networks in organizations, schools, or other fields.
Topics include:
- negative ties in organizations
- bullying and relational aggression
- gossiping in networks
- dynamics of dislike and hate in networks
- structural balance
- relational aggression and status dynamics
- the function of negative ties for group cohesion or for organizational performance
- negative ties and intergroup relations
- rejection and heterophobia in networks
Location:
Organized by:
Research Center for Educational and Network Studies (RECENS), CUB
Supported by: TÁMOP-4.2.2/B-10/1-2010-002 project (European Social Fund)
Enquiries about the workshop may be sent to [log in to unmask].
Scientific Organization Committee:
Károly Takács (chair), Corvinus University of Budapest, RECENS
Peter Abell, London School of Economics
Davide Barrera,
Anu¨ka Ferligoj,
Andreas Flache, University of Groningen
Yuval Kalish, University of Tel-Aviv
Emmanuel Lazega, University of Paris - Dauphine
György Lengyel, Corvinus University of Budapest
Michael Mäs, ETH Zürich
Zuzana Sasovova, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Tom Snijders, University of Oxford/University of Groningen
Zoltán Szántó, Corvinus University of Budapest, RECENS
Martin van der Gaag, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Balázs Vedres, Central European University
René Veenstra, University of Groningen
Rafael Wittek, University of Groningen