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El. knyga: Citizenship and Participation in the Information Age

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  • Formatas: 448 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Mar-2002
  • Leidėjas: Garamond Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781442602465
  • Formatas: 448 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Mar-2002
  • Leidėjas: Garamond Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781442602465

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Published Under the Garamond Imprint

The new century promises to be a roller coaster ride fueled by rapidly changing information and communications technologies (ICTs). With the capacity for the almost instant transfer of digital information across and beyond our planet, commonly held notions of distance and speed, as well as our understanding of the nature and meaning of interpersonal contact are being challenged and redefined. Many believe that the very structural underpinnings of society will be transformed.

This book reflects each contributor's vision of the future, visions that range from the enthusiastic and hopeful to the pessimistic and fearful. The editors' purpose is to alert readers to what lies ahead in the new information society, and to help unravel the public policy implications of the changes wrought by information and communications technologies.

A major concern of this book is whether states are able to provide the necessary balance between the often competing priorities of global business and the interests of individuals and groups of citizens. For example, are traditional inter-state boundaries and borders becoming too eroded, espectially in the South, as a result of globalization? Whatever role governments are to play, it is inevitable that balance will only be achieved through active citizen participation, no longer limited by geographic constraints.



Published Under the Garamond Imprint

The new century promises to be a roller coaster ride fueled by rapidly changing information and communications technologies (ICTs). With the capacity for the almost instant transfer of digital information across and beyond our planet, commonly held notions of distance and speed, as well as our understanding of the nature and meaning of interpersonal contact are being challenged and redefined. Many believe that the very structural underpinnings of society will be transformed.

This book reflects each contributor's vision of the future, visions that range from the enthusiastic and hopeful to the pessimistic and fearful. The editors' purpose is to alert readers to what lies ahead in the new information society, and to help unravel the public policy implications of the changes wrought by information and communications technologies.

A major concern of this book is whether states are able to provide the necessary balance between the often competing priorities of global business and the interests of individuals and groups of citizens. For example, are traditional inter-state boundaries and borders becoming too eroded, espectially in the South, as a result of globalization? Whatever role governments are to play, it is inevitable that balance will only be achieved through active citizen participation, no longer limited by geographic constraints.



This book reflects each contributor's vision of the future, visions that range from the enthusiastic and hopeful to the pessimistic and fearful.

Acknowledgements viii
Introduction
Competing Visions: The Social Impact of Information and Communications Technology
9(10)
Roma Harris
Manjunath Pendakur
Perspectives on the Information Society
Forthcoming Features: Information and Communications Technologies and the Sociology of the Future
19(14)
Peter Golding
Illusions of Perfect Information and Fantasies of Control in the Information Society
33(23)
Dwayne Winseck
Software Industry, Religious Nationalism, and Social Movements in India: Aspects of Globalization?
56(9)
Ramaswami Harindranath
Labouring to Be a Citizen: Trade Unions, Public Interest and Cyber-Populism in India
65(14)
Paula Chakravartty
Imagining the Knowledge-Based Economy: Soon-to-be Labour Force Entrants Predict the Future of Work
79(8)
Roma Harris
Margaret Ann Wilkinson
Market Knowledge and the Good Citizen
87(7)
Richard Maxwell
Neo-Liberalizing Welfare: Politics and Information Technology in a New Era of Governance
94(9)
G. Dean Barry
Defining the Canadian DNA Data Bank: A Sociological Perspective
103(18)
Neil Gerlach
ICTs in Dutch Schools: Problems, Prospects and Promises
121(16)
Leen d'Haenens
Madelon Kokhuis
Cindy von Summeren
Competing Interests: Censorship and Access to Information
International Communication and the Extremist Right
137(10)
John Downing
The Harm of Hate Propaganda
147(17)
Hilliard Aronovitch
Censorship in Library Collection Development Practices and Civic Participation: A Theoretical Approach
164(19)
Juris Dilevko
Having a Cow: Reactions To ``Veggie Libel'' Laws and the Oprah Trials
183(13)
Diana Knott
Risk and the Internet: Perception and Reality
196(15)
Eric A. Zimmer
Christopher D. Hunter
Concentration of Ownership in the Information World
Universal Access in IHAC and NIIAC: Transformed Narrative and Meaning in Information Policy
211(8)
Martin Dowding
Saving Books from the Market: Price Maintenance Policies in the United States and Europe
219(12)
Laura Miller
Books and Commerce in an Age of Virtual Capital: The Changing Political Economy of Bookselling
231(19)
Jon Bekken
Copyright and Citizenship
250(17)
Michael Rushton
National Public Radio: The Case for Normative Mission in the Marketplace
267(20)
Michael McCauley
Citizenship and Democracy
Human Rights in the Information Society: Civic Participation in Shaping the Future
287(13)
Cees Hamelink
Networks for Social Knowledge: The Anti-NAFTA Challenge
300(10)
Sophia Huyer
Globalization, Information Society and Social Movement
310(12)
Marc Lemire
Web Sites of Resistance: Internetworking and Civil Society
322(15)
Kelly O'Neill
The Citizen's Right To Communicate
337(10)
William F. Birdsall
Merrilee Rasmussen
Crossing the Great Divide: Connecting Citizens to Government in New South Wales, Australia
347(14)
Jan Houghton
Linda Tsiu-Shuang Chin
Jacques and Jill at VPL: Citizenship and the Use of the Internet at Vancouver Public Library
361(11)
Ellen Balka
Brian J. Peterson
Does a Networked Society Foster Participatory Democracy Or is Commitment to Place-based Community Still a Necessity for Civic Engagement?
372(16)
Mary Wilson
Access to U.S. Federal Government Information for People with Disabilities: An Analysis of the Legal Requirements, Interpretations, and Implications
388(12)
Kimberley Lauffer
Remapping the Canadian North: Nunavut, Communications and Inuit Participatory Development
400(15)
Gail Guthrie Valaskakis
Bush and Bureaucrats: Women's Civic Participation from the Australian Outback
415(12)
Lyn Simpson
Leonie Daws
Leanne Wood
Josephine Previte
The Contributors 427(4)
Index 431