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E-grāmata: Routledge Handbook of Internet Politics

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  • Formāts: 528 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Aug-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781134087549
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  • Formāts: 528 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Aug-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781134087549
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The politics of the internet has entered the social science mainstream. From debates about its impact on parties and election campaigns following momentous presidential contests in the United States, to concerns over international security, privacy and surveillance in the post-9/11, post-7/7 environment; from the rise of blogging as a threat to the traditional model of journalism, to controversies at the international level over how and if the internet should be governed by an entity such as the United Nations; from the new repertoires of collective action open to citizens, to the massive programs of public management reform taking place in the name of e-government, internet politics and policy are continually in the headlines.

The Routledge Handbook of Internet Politics is a collection of over thirty chapters dealing with the most significant scholarly debates in this rapidly growing field of study. Organized in four broad sections: Institutions, Behavior, Identities, and Law and Policy, the Handbook summarizes and criticizes contemporary debates while pointing out new departures. A comprehensive set of resources, it provides linkages to established theories of media and politics, political communication, governance, deliberative democracy and social movements, all within an interdisciplinary context. The contributors form a strong international cast of established and junior scholars.

This is the first publication of its kind in this field; a helpful companion to students and scholars of politics, international relations, communication studies and sociology.

List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
List of contributors
xii
Preface to the paperback edition xvi
Acknowledgments xviii
Introduction: new directions in internet politics research
1(10)
Andrew Chadwick
Philip N. Howard
Part 1: Institutions
11(118)
The internet in U.S. election campaigns
13(12)
Richard Davis
Jody C Baumgartner
Peter L. Francia
Jonathan S. Morris
European political organizations and the internet: mobilization, participation, and change
25(15)
Stephen Ward
Rachel Gibson
Electoral web production practices in cross-national perspective: the relative influence of national development, political culture, and web genre
40(16)
Kirsten A. Foot
Michael Xenos
Steven M. Schneider
Randolph Khiver
Nicholas W. Jankowski
Parties, election campaigning, and the internet: toward a comparative institutional approach
56(16)
Nick Anstead
Andrew Chadwick
Technological change and the shifting nature of political organization
72(14)
Bruce Bimber
Cynthia Stohl
Andrew J. Flanagin
Making parliamentary democracy visible: speaking to, with, and for the public in the age of interactive technology
86(13)
Stephen Coleman
Bureaucratic reform and e-government in the United States: an institutional perspective
99(15)
Jane E. Fountain
Public management change and e-government: the emergence of digital-era governance
114(15)
Helen Margetts
Part 2: Behavior
129(86)
Wired to fact: the role of the internet in identifying deception during the 2004 U.S. presidential campaign
131(13)
Bruce W. Hardy
Kathleen Hall Jamieson
Kenneth Winneg
Political engagement online: do the information rich get richer and the like-minded more similar?
144(13)
Jennifer Brundidge
Ronald E. Rice
Information, the internet and direct democracy
157(16)
Justin Reedy
Chris Wells
Toward digital citizenship: addressing inequality in the information age
173(13)
Karen Mossberger
Online news creation and consumption: implications for modern democracies
186(15)
David Tewksbury
Jason Rittenberg
Web 2.0 and the transformation of news and journalism
201(14)
James Stanyer
Part 3: Identities
215(106)
The internet and the changing global media environment
217(13)
Brian McNair
The virtual sphere 2.0: the internet, the public sphere, and beyond
230(16)
Zizi Papacharissi
Identity, technology, and narratives: transnational activism and social networks
246(15)
W. Lance Bennett
Amoshaun Toft
Theorizing gender and the internet: past, present, and future
261(14)
Niels van Doom
Liesbet van Zoonen
New immigrants, the internet, and civic society
275(13)
Yong-Chan Kim
Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach
One Europe, digitally divided
288(17)
Jan A. G. M. van Dijk
Working around the state: internet use and political identity in the Arab world
305(16)
Deborah L. Wheeler
Part 4: Law and policy
321(114)
The geopolitics of internet control: censorship, sovereignty, and cyberspace
323(14)
Ronald J. Deibert
Locational surveillance: embracing the patterns of our lives
337(12)
David J. Phillips
Metaphoric reinforcement of the virtual fence: factors shaping the political economy of property in cyberspace
349(15)
Oscar H. Gandy, Jr.
Kenneth Neil Farrall
Globalizing the logic of openness: open source software and the global governance of intellectual property
364(12)
Christopher May
Exclusionary rules? The politics of protocols
376(8)
Greg Elmer
The new politics of the internet: multi-stakeholder policy-making and the internet technocracy
384(17)
William H. Dutton
Malcolm Peltu
Enabling effective multi-stakeholder participation in global internet governance through accessible cyber-infrastructure
401(14)
Derrick L. Cogburn
Internet diffusion and the digital divide: the role of policy-making and political institutions
415(9)
Kenneth S. Rogerson
Daniel Milton
Conclusion: political omnivores and wired states
424(11)
Philip N. Howard
Andrew Chadwick
Bibliography 435(52)
Index 487
Andrew Chadwick is Professor of Political Science and Founding Director of the New Political Communication Unit at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is the author of Internet Politics: States, Citizens, and New Communication Technologies (Oxford University Press), which won the American Sociological Association Communication and Information Technologies Section Outstanding Book Award.

Philip N. Howard is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Washington, and directs the World Information Access Project (www.wiareport.org). He is the author of New Media Campaigns and the Managed Citizen (Cambridge University Press), which won book awards from the American Sociological Association and the International Communication Association.