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El. knyga: Reformatting Politics: Information Technology and Global Civil Society

Edited by (Hobarth & William Smith College, New York, USA), Edited by (Institute of Network Cultures and University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands), Edited by (The Catholic University of America, Washington DC, USA)
  • Formatas: 272 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-May-2013
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781135441968
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 272 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-May-2013
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781135441968
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This book examines the ways in which new information and communication technologies (ICTs) are being used by civil society organizations (CSOs) to achieve their aims through activities and networks that cross national borders. These new ICTs (the internet, mobile phones, satellite radio and television) have allowed these civil society organizations to form extensive networks linking the local and the global in new ways and to flourish internationally in ways that were not possible without them.

Reformatting Politics consists of four sections containing essays by some of the top scholars and activists working at the intersections of networked societies, civil society organizations, and information technology. The book also includes a section that takes a critical look at the UN World Summit of Information Society and the role that global governance has played and will play in the use and dissemination of these new technologies. Finally, the contributors aim to influence this important and emerging field of inquiry by posing a set of questions and directions for future research. In sum, Reformatting Politics is a fresh look at the way critical network practice through the use of information technology is reformatting the terms and terrains of global politics.

Foreword vii
Preface xi
Introduction xv
JODI DEAN, JON W. ANDERSON, AND GEERT LOVINK
I. Networks
1 Net-Work Is Format Work: Issue Networks and the Sites of Civil Society Politics
3(16)
NOORTJE MARRES
2 Organized Networks and Nonrepresentative Democracy
19(16)
NED ROSSITER
3 Power Laws, Weblogs, and Inequality
35(8)
CLAY SHIRKEY
4 Openness and its Discontents
43(12)
JAMIE KING
5 Anybody Can Be TV: How P2P Home Video Will Challenge the Network News
55(14)
DRAZEN PANTIC
II. Sites
6 Communicating Islamic Fundamentalism as Global Citizenship
69(16)
LINA KHATIB
7 Lost in Transition? The Internet and Reformasi in Indonesia
85(22)
MERLYNA LIM
8 Exploring the Potential for More Strategic Civil Society Use of Mobile Phones
107(14)
OKOTH FRED MUDHAI
9 The Potential Role of Information Technology in International Remittance Transfers
121(8)
SCOTT S. ROBINSON
10 Network Technology and Networked Organizations
129(12)
EVAN HENSHAW-PLATH
III. Formats
11 Understanding the WSIS: An Institutional Analysis of the United Nations World Summit on the Information Society
141(20)
HANS KLEIN
12 The End of the Experiment: The Failure of Democracy in ICANN
161(20)
JOHN PALFREY
13 Debating Communication Imbalances: From the MacBride Report to the WSIS
181(24)
CLAUDIA PADOVANI
14 Trial and Error in Internet Governance: ICANN, the WSIS, and the Making of a Global Civil Society—An Interview with Milton Mueller
205(16)
GEERT LOVINK
Glossary of Acronyms 221(4)
Editors 225(2)
Contributors 227(4)
Index 231


JON W. ANDERSON is an anthropologist, has taught in Germany and Norway, and currently is Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the Catholic University of America. He is co-director of the Arab Information Project with Michael C. Hudson at Georgetown University's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies.



JODI DEAN teaches political theory at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. She serves on the editorial board of the journals Theory and Event and Constellations and has edited symposia on new technologies for the journals Constellations and Signs as well as the books Feminism and the New Democracy (Sage 1997) and Cultural Studies and Political Theory (Cornell UP 2000).



GEERT LOVINK is founder and director of the Institute of Network Cultures (www.networkcultures.org), professor at Interactive Media (Hogeschool van Amsterdam) and associate professor at the Media & Culture department, University of Amsterdam.