TUSCALOOSA, Ala.
- Dr. Robert D. Putnam, a Harvard professor and author of a book detailing
how Americans have become increasingly disconnected from friends,
family and neighbors, will give a presentation titled Community
in America, Before and After 9/11, on Friday, Jan. 25, at 7:30
p.m. in Morgan Auditorium on The University of Alabama campus.
In his book, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of
American Community, Putnam writes that evidence shows Americans
participate in fewer organizations, know neighbors less, meet with
friends less frequently, and even socialize within their families
less often than they did 25 years ago.
Putnam believes changes in work and family structure, television,
computers and other factors have contributed to this decline, but
he says that America civically reinvented itself some 100 years
ago and can do it again. He will discuss the impact the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks has on this trend.
This presentation, UAs annual Allen Going Lecture, is sponsored
by Phi Beta Kappa and
is free and open to the public, as is a post-lecture reception.
Putnam is the Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy
at Harvard University, where he teaches undergraduate and graduate
courses in American politics, international relations, comparative
politics and public policy. He is the founder of The Saguaro Seminar:
Civic Engagement in America, a program that has brought together
practitioners and thinkers who have met periodically since 1997
to discuss ideas to fortify the nation's civic connectedness.
He has authored or co-authored 10 books and more than 30 scholarly
works.
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