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AJPH First Look, published online ahead of print Jul 7, 2005
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The Privileging of Communitarian Ideas: Citation Practices and the Translation of Social Capital Into Public Health Research

Spencer Moore, PhD, MPH, Alan Shiell, PhD, Penelope Hawe, PhD and Valerie A. Haines, PhD

Spencer Moore is with the Centre for Health and Policy Studies, Alan Shiell is with the Department of Community Health Sciences, and Valerie A. Haines is with the Department of Sociology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta. Penelope Hawe is with the Centre for the Study of Social and Physical Environments and Health, Markin Institute of Public Health, University of Calgary and the School of Population Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.



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FIGURE 1— Citation network for the 65 articles in the study.

Note. Circles represent articles; the larger the circle, the higher the article’s in-degree centrality score. Arrows represent citations to other articles. Isolated articles (n = 15) appear on the left side of the figure.

 


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FIGURE 2— Main path of the development of literature on social capital, 1997 to 2002.

Note. Boxes show first author of each article and its citation number in the References section of this article.

 





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