1. Singer, P. (1995).How are we to live? p. 35. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books.
2. Gibb, J.R. (1978).Trust: A new view of personal and organizational developmentp. 13. Los Angeles, CA: The Guild of Tutors Press.
3. See Lipsett, S.M., & Schneider, W.C. (1983).The confidence gap: Business labor and government in the public mind. New York: The Free Press; Couto, R.A., & Guthrie, C.S. (1999).Making democracy work better: Mediating structures social capital and the democratic prospect. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
4. Mitchell, T.R., & Scott, W.G. (1990). America’s problems and needed reforms: Confronting the ethic of personal advantage. Academy of Management Executive 4(3) 23–35.
5. See Wellman, K. (1999).Networks in the global village: Life in contemporary communitiesBoulder, CO: Westview Press. These authors studied “Netville,” a suburb of Toronto, one of the world’s first residential developments to be equipped with a broadband local network. They report that the Internet can encourage the resurgence of the civic involvement that has been argued to be in decline in the Western world. These findings challenge researchers who have argued that, as people spend more time online, they become isolated in the home and reduce their social contacts.