
|  | "transnational immigration" Topic Cloud About the Topic Cloud View
A Topic Cloud® provides a simple view of important keywords and key-phrases used
in a blogsite. The topic cloud view makes it easy to identify
subjects that
are discussed in the blogsite—frequently discussed subjects are presented
in larger type and brighter colors while seldom-discussed subjects are
represented more subtly.
The top-level cloud provides a high-level view of the subjects discussed in
the blogsite. Simply click on a specific word or phrase to focus your
search. As you drill into a subject
area, the cloud may become smaller or larger depending on the granularity of
your search. At every point, however, you have direct access to related
blogsite content in the lower portion of your browser window.  About the Tag Taxonomy View
The tag taxonomy view shows a family of related keyword and
key-phrases (i.e., "tags") mentioned in the blogsite. This view helps you
discover and navigate between related subject matter. This becomes
increasingly valuable as the number of search results grows.
To illustrate, consider the following scenario. Imagine that a weblog
author tagged a particular posting with "market communication blogsite".
The tag taxonomy would show how this key-phrase is related to other phrases such
as, "market communication", "communication blogsite", and others. Further
imagine another author tagged a different post with "project management
blogsite". Like "market communication blogsite", this phrase is related to
the more general phrase "blogsite" (and others).
Now, if you drilled into (i.e., searched) the topic cloud for the term
"blogsite", the results would include the two items described above and,
perhaps, others. If the number of results were small, you could simply
browse the available results. On the other hand, if the number of results
were large, you could use the tag taxonomy view to browse results classified
into related subject groupings. For example, under "blogsite" you would
see that there are results for "market communication blogsite", "project
management blogsite", and possibly others.
Using the taxonomy view as your guide, you can quickly focus your inquiry on
subjects of interest.  "transnational immigration" Tag Family
Tagged Content (10 Results) About the Tagged Content View
The tagged content view shows blogsite content (i.e., weblog posts,
FAQs, briefings, etc.) tagged with one or more of the keywords or key-phrases
from the current topic cloud. Results are presented in reverse
chronological order (i.e., newest first). Ages are shown in human-friendly
units, such as "3 days ago" or "9 weeks ago", but you can see exact times and
dates by hovering over an age value.
Results include useful details about each item including, title, brief
summary, age, author, containing channel (i.e., where the item was posted), etc.
This view also provides numerous navigation capabilities including, opening the
item in the same window or in a new window; opening the containing channel; or
navigating to related items (via the taxonomy view by clicking a tag link).  One Year Later: Our Transnational Presidency  - Was the election of Barack Obama a transnational phenomenon that signaled evolution of the American identity?
- Created 7 weeks ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 - Updated 8 weeks ago by Pete Plastrik
transnational immigration nuPOLIS 2009: Most Popular Items  - From our first year on the Web, the blogs and developments that most resonated with our growing audience.
- Created 10 weeks ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 - Updated 3 months ago by Pete Plastrik
transnational immigration Transnationalism: What It Means to Local Communities  - In a new article, nuPOLIS partner Alvaro Lima examines the impact of this immigration trend on community development.
- Created 3 months ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 transnational immigration Global City Citizens: A New Worldwide Force  - nuPOLIS partner Alvaro Lima gets the spotlight in Neal Peirce's Citiwire.net column about transnational immigrants.
- Created 5 months ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 transnational immigration Transnational Innovation: Diaspora's Hidden Benefits  - A shift in the immigrant experience results in new ideas for social change.
- Created 9 months ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 transnational immigration Social Innovation Puzzle: What's Inside, Outside the Box?  - "Innovation space" is a competition among new ideas, old ideas, and other ideas.
- Created 10 months ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 - Updated 5 months ago
transnational immigration Not Your Grandfather's Immigration  - Immigrant communities are developing new tools to stay connected globally, enhance and spread their culture, and increase economic opportunities, nuPOLIS's Alvaro Lima and Peter Plastrik report.
- Created 14 months ago by Pete Plastrik in Social Innovation Blog
 - Updated 13 months ago by Greg Berry
transnational immigration, transnational immigration index January 2009: nuPOLIS Projects Update  - Track developments in social innovation projects you're interested in.
- Created 14 months ago by Pete Plastrik
- Updated 5 months ago
transnational immigration Digaai.com  - Network of expatriate Brazilians.
- Created 15 months ago by Greg Berry
- Updated 5 months ago
transnational immigration Transnational Immigration  - Research and innovations developed by Alvaro Lima, Director of Research for the City of Boston, focusing on the growing number of immigrants in the US who live and work transnationally--here and back in their home countries.
- Created 16 months ago by Greg Berry
- Updated 10 months ago by Greg Berry
transnational immigration
Topic Cloud® is a registered trademark of MyST Technology Partners, Inc. |  |
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Community Innovation book
Exclusive online release.
nuPOLIS President Peter Plastrik and his co-author Theodore Staton are writing a new book, titled , How Social Innovators are Transforming America's Communities. Download the Introduction and Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 4. (It's free.)
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Report: New Immigration Trends
Ground-breaking research.
Open your eyes to the immigration trend no one has noticed yet: millions of immigrants economically, socially, and politically active in the U.S. and their home countries, using modern IT and media in ways nobody expected.
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