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Civic Community in Small-Town America: How Civic Welfare is Influenced by Local Capitalism and Civic Engagement

Author

Listed:
  • Thomas A Lyson
  • Michael D Irwin
  • Charles M Tolbert
  • Alfred R Nucci

Abstract

The aims of this paper are twofold: first, to gain a fuller understanding of factors that foster community cohesion and contribute to the residents� social and economic well-being; and, second, to move beyond previous research that used larger spatial units such as states, counties, or aggregates of counties and to focus instead on American small towns (population 2,500-20,000). The data on small towns are drawn from public-use files and from confidential microdata from various economic censuses. From these sources we construct measures of locally oriented firms, self-employment, business establishments that serve as gathering places, and associations. The local capitalism and civic engagement variables generally perform as hypothesized; in some cases they are related quite strongly to civic welfare outcomes such as income levels, poverty rates, and nonmigration rates. We discuss the advantages and disadvantages of working with place-level data and suggest some strategies for subsequent work on small towns and other incorporated places.

Suggested Citation

  • Thomas A Lyson & Michael D Irwin & Charles M Tolbert & Alfred R Nucci, 2001. "Civic Community in Small-Town America: How Civic Welfare is Influenced by Local Capitalism and Civic Engagement," Working Papers 01-19, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau.
  • Handle: RePEc:cen:wpaper:01-19
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    File URL: https://www2.census.gov/ces/wp/2001/CES-WP-01-19.pdf
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