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Stowe Boyd is a well-known media subversive, and an internationally recognized authority on real-time, collaborative and social technologies. His new blog is Message.

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November 19, 2005

Acting White: Roland Fryer Links Black Popularity and Academics

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Posted by Stowe Boyd

A recent post at Centrality, based on recent research of Harvard's Roland Fryer on "acting white":

In the Winter 2006 issue of Eduction Next, Harvard's Roland Fryer takes an economist's tilt at social network analysis to dig into the issues surrounding "acting white" -- the long-discussed theory that young American blacks intentionally do less well in school that their talents would lead them in order to remain socially engaged with other blacks who, the theory goes, associate academic success with various negative attributes of white students.

[Read the entire post at Centrality.]

Comments (15) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Economics

August 06, 2005

Virginia Postrel on Economic Sociology

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Posted by Stowe Boyd

Virginia Postrel, author of The Future and Its Enemies, and the Dynamist blog, recently wrote a piece in the Boston Globe about economic sociology. A fascinating run through a rich area of research, that I review in my most recent Centrality post.

My conclusions:

Postrel has managed to quickly highlight the trajectory of economic sociology's research direction, and provide some tantalizing examples of how this thinking is important for business.

But perhaps most important is the unstated argument: that the classical economic metaphors about markets and human interaction are being overturned. Business leaders today cannot approach their business plans based on the classical market concepts. People are not homogeneous, they are strongly influenced by who they know, and their economic decisions are framed by the social context they are embedded in. This is the core of today's bottom up marketing approaches -- like word of mouth or buzz marketing -- that rejects mass market, broadcast approaches to influencing buying behavior, and focuses on the intensely personal elements of deciding which car to buy, what clothes to wear, or what music to listen to.

Click here to read the full post at Centrality

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Economics