id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_rsklhdic7jgmndu4z3p3yoqkim Thomas H. Sander Still Bowling Alone?: The Post-9/11 Split 2009 10 .pdf application/pdf 3582 217 63 http://osc.hul.harvard.edu/dash/open-access-feedback?handle=&title=Still%20Bowling%20Alone?%20The%20Post-9/11%20Split&community=1/3345933&collection=1/3345934&owningCollection1/3345934&harvardAuthors=24116187299ba6af39726cf0c5b1c218&department Putnam entitled "Bowling Alone: America's Declining Social Capital."1 The essay struck a Even though Putnam's article and subsequent book-length study Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community2 focused Both Bowling Alone and a 2001 Harvard report known as Better Together6 argued that America could be civically restored in two ways: the civic conscience of young people in the United States. upturn in civic engagement by young people. The long-term civic effects of the Obama campaign on the 9/11 Generation remain uncertain. But it is only part of an ominous larger and longer-term picture whose main feature is a growing civic and social gap in the United ways to expand the post-9/11 resurgence of civic and social engagement trend over the last decade, adult Americans are engaging differently. civic and social engagement beyond the ranks Putnam, "Bowling Alone: America's Declining Social Capital," Journal ./cache/work_rsklhdic7jgmndu4z3p3yoqkim.pdf ./txt/work_rsklhdic7jgmndu4z3p3yoqkim.txt