Futurity

We succeed or fail with help from our friends

Human networks can have a big impact on whether we get ahead in life, but they can have the opposite effect too.
friends posing for photo (human networks concept)

To understand why people succeed or fail, look at their circle of friends. Like it or not, says economist Matthew Jackson, people’s fates are closely connected to their human networks.

While human networks can be beneficial—a friend can be a referral to a lucrative new job, for example—there can be negative effects as well: What happens when someone doesn’t know influential people? A limited human network, Jackson says, can hinder opportunities with deleterious effects in society. It helps explain why social immobility and inequality exist today.

The deep connections that people nurture underlie important political and economic establishments as well, Jackson says. For example, financial markets have become so intertwined—with central players larger than ever—that when Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008, it triggered a recession worldwide. One risky financial move is all it takes to spread financial distress across the network.

Jackson, a professor of economics at Stanford University, has researched the powerful effects of networks for more than 25 years. He’s collected his findings in a new book, The Human Network: How Your Social Position Determines Your Power, Beliefs, and Behaviors.

Here, Jackson talks about how human networks can explain many important phenomena, from financial crises to disparities across groups, consequences of school segregation, social immobility, and more.

The post We succeed or fail with help from our friends appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
When New Moms Use Cannabis, THC Shows Up In Breast Milk
When breastfeeding mothers used cannabis, its psychoactive component THC showed up in the milk they produced. Further, unlike alcohol, when researchers detected THC in milk there was no consistent time when its concentration peaked and started to dec
Futurity2 min readChemistry
Catalyst Turns CO2 Into Renewable Fuel
Researchers have developed a catalyst material known as cobalt phthalocyanine that converts carbon dioxide—a significant driver of climate change—into renewable fuels such as methanol. Published in the journal ACS Catalysis, the researchers studied u
Futurity3 min read
Get Ready For A Very Active Hurricane Season In 2024
Brace for a very active hurricane season this year, warn forecasters. The 2023 hurricane season saw 20 named storms and three major hurricanes from the Atlantic basin, ranking as the fourth most active hurricane season on record. This year’s hurrican

Related Books & Audiobooks