The human network How your social position determines your power, beliefs, and behaviors

Matthew O. Jackson

Book - 2019

Examines how human networks drive inequality, social immobility, and political polarization and are often overlooked factors in success and failure, examining the role of social structures in patterns ranging from disease outbreak to financial crises.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

302.3/Jackson
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 302.3/Jackson Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Pantheon Books [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Matthew O. Jackson (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
336 pages : illustrations, charts ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-320) and index.
ISBN
9781101871430
  • 1. Introduction: Networks and Human Behavior
  • 2. Power and Influence: Central Positions in Networks
  • 3. Diffusion and Contagion
  • 4. Too Connected to Fail: Financial Networks
  • 5. Homophily: Houses Divided
  • 6. Immobility and Inequality: Network Feedback and Poverty Traps
  • 7. The Wisdom and Folly of the Crowd
  • 8. The Influence of Our Friends and Our Local Network Structures
  • 9. Globalization: Our Changing Networks
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A worthy exploration of "how networks form and why they exhibit certain key patterns" as well as "how those patterns determine our power, opinions, opportunities, behaviors, and accomplishments."Early on in his first book for a general audience, Jackson (Economics/Stanford Univ.; Social and Economic Networks, 2008, etc.) looks at the friend paradox: Almost everyone has friends. Many people have the impression that others have more friends than they, and this is not neuroticism; it's true. After all, popular people have more friends than unpopular people, so they are overrepresented on everyone's list of friends, and people with few friends are underrepresented. People exaggerate the number of friends who drink and take drugs because these are social (i.e., networked) activities, and they underestimate the amount of non-networked behaviore.g., studying. Social media amplifies this: 98 percent of Twitter users have fewer followers than those they follow. As a result, popular people exert a disproportionate influence simply because they appear to dominate our network. Jackson expands this to clearly reveal unnerving network effects in areas of our lives including journalism, public health, politics, economics, and the digital world. The wisdom of crowds is genuine. Given unbiased information, their conclusions are more accurate than any individual's. Of course, the stupidity of crowds is equally genuine. The internet has triggered a vast expansion of human networks, but because we prefer people with behaviors and beliefs similar to ours ("homophily"), the last 20 years have seen an explosion of fake news, political polarization, and ugly nationalism. However, we have seen much of this before. "Humans," writes the author, "have been rewired many times: by the printing press, letter writing, trains, the telegraph, overseas travel, the telephone, the internet, and the advent of social media. Perhaps it is our arrogance that leads us to assume that the current changesare truly revolutionary and unique."A mixture of delicious truths and ingenious sociological concepts that will convince most readers that we pay too much attention to the people around us. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

From:   1 · Introduction: Networks and Human Behavior   The More Things Change   On December 17, 2010, Mohamed Bouazizi, a twenty-six-year-old street vendor in the dusty small city of Sidi Bouzid in cen­tral Tunisia, lit himself on fire. He did so as a desperate statement of outrage at the tyrannical government that had ruled Tunisia for more than two decades and repeatedly crushed any opposition. His family had long been outspoken against the government and he found himself regularly harassed by the local police. That morning, the police publicly humiliated him and confiscated his day's produce. Mohamed had borrowed the money to buy his produce, and its loss was the last of many straws. Mohamed drenched himself in gasoline and burned himself alive in protest. Decades ago, the several-thousand-person protest that quickly followed would have been the end of the story. Few outside of Sidi Bouzid would have even been aware that anything happened. How­ever, videos of the aftermath of Mohamed Bouazizi's self-immolation were impossible to contain and were quickly shared via social media and reported widely. News of the Tunisian and other governments' oppression had already been spreading after confidential documents appeared weeks earlier on WikiLeaks. The Arab Spring that would follow was enabled by and coordinated via social media such as Face­book and Twitter as well as cell phones.1   Although the methods of communication were modern, ulti­mately it was a network of humans spreading news and outrage. What was new was how widely and quickly news could spread, and how people were able to coordinate their responses. But understanding what happened still boils down to understanding how news spreads between people and how their behaviors influence each other.   The size and ferocity of the resulting Tunisian protests toppled the government by mid-January. The insurgency had also spread to neighboring Algeria, and over the next two months erupted in Oman, Egypt, Yemen, Bahrain, Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, and Syria, and even Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. The successes and failures of the Arab Spring are open to debate. But the swift proliferation of protests throughout that part of the world was not only unprecedented but highlighted the importance of human networks in our lives.   As dramatic as recent changes in human communication have been, as Thomas Friedman's quote above indicates, the world has shrunk many times before--in the wake of: the printing press, the posting of letters, overseas travel, trains, the telegraph, the telephone, the radio, airplanes, television, and the fax machine. Internet tech­nology and social media are only the latest chapter in the long his­tory of changes in how people interact, at what distance, how quickly, and with whom.   Yet even as networks of interactions between humans change, much about them is enduring and predictable. Understanding human networks, as well as how they are changing, can help us to answer many questions about our world, such as: How does a person's posi­tion in a network determine their influence and power? What sys­tematic errors do we make when forming opinions based on what we learn from our friends? How do financial contagions work and why are they different from the spread of a flu? How do splits in our social networks feed inequality, immobility, and polarization? How is globalization changing international conflict and wars? Despite their prominent role in the answers to these questions, human networks are often overlooked when people analyze impor­tant political and economic behaviors and trends. This is not to say that we have not been studying networks, but instead that there is a chasm between our scientific knowledge of networks as drivers of human behavior and what the general public and policymakers know. This book is meant to help close that gap.   Each chapter shows how accounting for networks of human rela­tionships changes our thinking about an issue. Thus, the theme of this book is how networks enhance our understanding of many of our social and economic behaviors.   There are a few key patterns of networks that matter, and so the story here involves more than just one idea hammered home. By the end of this book, you should be more keenly aware of the importance of several aspects of the networks in which you live. Our discussion will also involve two different perspectives: one is how networks form and why they exhibit certain key patterns, and the other is how those patterns determine our power, opinions, opportunities, behav­iors, and accomplishments. Excerpted from The Human Network: How the Intersection of Your Many Identities Can Determine Your Success or Failure in Life by Matthew Jackson All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.