Isaac Jabola-Carolus (PhD Candidate)
Received the 2020-2021 NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant ($16,000) and a Doctoral Research Grant ($15,000) from the Washington Center for Equitable Growth for the current academic year.
Isaac Jabola-Carolus (PhD Candidate)
Received the 2020-2021 NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant ($16,000) and a Doctoral Research Grant ($15,000) from the Washington Center for Equitable Growth for the current academic year.
Sebastian Villamizar-Santamaria (PhD Candidate)
Won the Manuel Chiriboga International Prize. This prize is awarded to doctoral dissertations that study rural development in Latin America by Rimisp, a Latin American-wide foundation.
Elena Vesselinov (Faculty) and Sebastian Villamizar-Santamaria (PhD Candidate) published a co-authored article titled “A global community or a global waste of time? Content analysis of the Facebook site ‘Humans of New York’” in Journal of Urban Affairs (December 27, 2019) with Charles J. Gomez (Queens College) and Eva Fernandez (Queens College)
This paper explores how stories of everyday experiences in urban settings from around the world foster and sustain a community that seemingly transcends national borders. Given that both urban and online experiences are increasingly prevalent in modern life, surprisingly little attention is paid to how these experiences might foster a sense of community in an online setting. We use Facebook’s Humans of New York (HONY) site, analyzing over 130,000 text comments, to explore this question. We apply content analysis and text mining techniques, using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) software and multidimensional scaling (MDS) to visualize their latent patterns. Integrating Chayko’s theoretical model of “portable communities,” we find evidence suggesting the existence of a shared social context, of positive interaction, empathy, and support, irrespective of national boundaries.
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