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El. knyga: Framing Internet Safety

(University of South Florida)

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Since the beginning of the Internet era, it has become almost impossible to discuss youth and technology without mentioning online danger -- pornography that is just a click away, lurking sexual predators, and inescapable cyberbullies. In this book, Nathan Fisk takes an innovative approach to the subject, examining youth Internet safety as a technology of governance -- for information technologies and, by extension, for the forms of sociality and society they make possible. He argues that it is through the mobilization of various discourses of online risk that the everyday lives of youth are increasingly monitored and policed and the governing potentials of information technologies are explored.

Fisk relates particular panics over youth Internet safety to patterns of technological adoption by young people, focusing on the policy response at the federal level aimed at producing future cybercitizens. He describes pedagogies of surveillance, which position parents as agents of surveillance; the evolution of the youth Internet safety curricula, as seen through materials on cyberbullying and online reputation management; and, drawing on survey results and focus groups, parent and child everyday practice. Finally, Fisk offers recommendations for a "cybersafety of everyday life," connecting youth Internet safety to trends in national infrastructure protection and corporate information assurance.

Series Foreword vii
1 Introduction
1(16)
2 Predators and Proposals: Doing Research on Youth and Technology
17(20)
3 Figuring Youth and the Internet: Media and Legislative Narratives of Youth Internet Safety
37(32)
4 Pedagogies of Surveillance
69(22)
5 Cyberbullies and Cybercitizens
91(28)
6 Parents, Nonparents, and School Administrators
119(30)
7 "IT'S All Common Sense!": Kids, Drama, and Internet Safety
149(34)
8 Conclusion
183(14)
References 197(22)
Index 219