Bowling Alone—or Building Together? What New Social Capital Data Reveals About America
For years, the phrase “bowling alone” —popularized by Robert Putnam—has described a quiet unraveling in American life. Fewer clubs, shared spaces, and relationships that tie us together. A new analysis from Nationhood Lab adds fresh data to that story—and the results are both sobering and clarifying. Their central question was simple: Where in the United States is social capital strongest—and where is it weakest? But the answer reveals something much deeper about the condition of our communities. How the Study Measured Social Capital Rather than relying on a single measure, researchers examined county-level social capital using a composite index built from multiple indicators of civic life. This included: The density of associational life (bowling leagues, churches, sports clubs, civic groups, labor unions) Voter turnout in presidential elections Census response rates The number of nonprofit organizations In other words, they weren’t just asking what peo...