Community recognition
Community recognition is the acknowledgement by a community or social group of a notable achievement. It is often followed by awards and celebrations, such as the annual Phoenix, Arizona Community Recognition Awards and related breakfast.[1] The core of it is to bring attention to the contributions made to the community.
In The Forms of Capital (1986) Pierre Bourdieu distinguishes between three forms of capital: economic capital, cultural capital and social capital. He defines social capital as "the aggregate of the actual or potential resources which are linked to possession of a durable network of more or less institutionalized relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition."[2] Thus, community recognition can be defined as a form of social capital.
Recognition by community members, whether by subordinates, peers or superiors, is also part of motivation theory.[3] The reward of an individual creates a positive feedback loop, incenting them, and others who are inspired by their deeds and by the positive reinforcement of the community, to continue contributing, or join in to build upon such efforts.
References
- v
- t
- e
- Personal
- Professional
- Sexual
- Value
- Clique
- Adolescent
- Corporate social media
- Distributed social network (list)
- Enterprise social networking
- Enterprise social software
- Mobile social network
- Personal knowledge networking
theories
- Ambient awareness
- Assortative mixing
- Attention inequality
- Interpersonal bridge
- Organizational network analysis
- Small-world experiment
- Social aspects of television
- Social capital
- Social data revolution
- Social exchange theory
- Social identity theory
- Social media and psychology
- Social media intelligence
- Social media mining
- Social media optimization
- Social network analysis
- Social web
- Structural endogamy
- Virtual collective consciousness
processes
- Account verification
- Aggregation
- Change detection
- Blockmodeling
- Collaboration graph
- Collaborative consumption
- Giant Global Graph
- Lateral communication
- Reputation system
- Social bot
- Social graph
- Social media analytics
- Social network analysis software
- Social networking potential
- Social television
- Structural cohesion
- Algorithmic radicalization
- Community recognition
- Complex contagion
- Computer addiction
- Consequential strangers
- Friend of a friend
- Friending and following
- Friendship paradox
- Influence-for-hire
- Internet addiction
- Information overload
- Overchoice
- Six degrees of separation
- Social media addiction
- Social media and suicide
- Social invisibility
- Social network game
- Suicide and the Internet
- Tribe
- Viral phenomenon